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Fear,
misconceptions about screenings keep many
African-Americans from getting Mammograms
Newswise — Training physicians and
caregivers to improve cultural sensitivity
and communication with economically
disadvantaged African-American patients
could influence these women to get
mammograms that could save their lives,
according to a new study in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine.
The study found that many African-American
women perceive they are being treated with
disrespect and receive inadequate
explanations about screenings when they go
to health care facilities.
These experiences
influenced their decisions to skip
mammograms. They also fear they won't
receive correct treatment so they
avoid mammograms altogether, the study adds.
"The issue here is not whether these
feelings are founded or unfounded," said
study author Monica Peek, MD, MPH, assistant
professor of medicine at the Medical Center.
"The study gives more direction to health
professionals on how they can adapt their
treatment styles to encourage this high-risk
group of women to get screened."
The findings may help account for the huge
disparity between death rates from breast
cancer in white versus African-American
women.
Nationally, African-American women
have a 35 percent higher mortality rate from
breast cancer than white women, according to
the National Cancer Institute.
In Chicago,
the mortality rate for African-American
women is dramatically higher than for white
women -- 73 percent -- according to the
Sinai Urban Health Institute.
The findings are based on feedback gathered
during focus groups that included 29
low-income African-American women who were
at least 40 years old.
The women were asked
about their perception of mammograms,
whether they would undergo one to screen for
breast cancer, and other related questions.
Despite recommendations for women 40 and
older to have annual mammograms, only 55
percent of the women reported having a
mammogram within the last two years. One
woman in the study had a history of breast
cancer.
Participants in the study were low-income,
medically underserved African-American women
who lived in urban, economically challenged
neighborhoods throughout Chicago.
Participants received a $15 gift certificate
to a grocery store in exchange for their
participation.
Asked why they did not go for regular
mammograms, women in the study gave several
reasons.
Some felt they had not been treated
with respect or not received adequate
information from clinical teams during prior
visits to health care facilities.
One woman recounted feeling uncomfortable
when she was left alone while her images
were being developed and read by a
radiologist.
"You see, when they left me, there wasn't
nobody with me to talk to me," she said.
Other study participants said they thought
anyone with breast cancer would inevitably
die from the disease, so there was no use
getting a mammogram.
"I didn’t know that it was a possibility to
live after you had breast cancer or had been
found having breast cancer," one woman said.
"Everybody I know who had breast cancer
[has] died. I [wasn't aware] of anything
different," another woman said.
Women also said that stories circulate of
patients who had bad experiences undergoing
mammograms and received incorrect cancer
treatments, such as an unnecessary
mastectomy.
Those tales are all spun into
the urban folklore about mammograms and
impact women's decisions not to get
screened.
The study adds that because of
their fears, some women delay getting
screened, which leads to worse health
outcomes such as late-stage cancer diagnosis
and higher mortality rates.
The study points to the need for physicians
to be trained in cultural sensitivity.
If
health care providers tailored their care
appropriately for this population, these
patients may be more likely to return for
repeat mammograms.
The study also suggests
the need for more community-based health
educators to work within underserved
communities, explaining the breast cancer
screening process, addressing
misperceptions, and reinforcing the health
messages women receive from their
physicians.
"African-American women have a high need for
comprehensive information and better
communication from their health care
providers on breast cancer prevention and
treatment. Sadly, we heard none of the women
in our study were aware of early diagnosis
or positive breast cancer outcomes," Peek
said.
The study was funded by the Open Society
Institute's Medicine as a Profession (MAP)
fellowship program and Susan G. Komen for
the Cure. Peek is currently supported by the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Harold Amos
Medical Faculty Development program.
Additional study authors include Judith
Sayad and Ronald Markwardt.
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