ObjectiveTo understand how breast and cervical cancer screening are influenced by communicating with a healthcare provider, patient activation, and social determinants of health. MethodData were from the National Cancer Institute’s Health Information National Trends Survey, focusing on women with no history of cancer at least 21 years old (N = 1466) to study cervical cancer screening and those at least 40 years old (N = 1114) to study breast cancer screening. Variables included patient-centered communication, electronic healthcare communication, patient activation, race/ethnicity, education, health insurance status, Appalachian residence, and financial insecurity. ResultsElectronic communication predicted both cancer screens, but especially for White women. Patient-centered communication influenced cervical cancer screening only for women with insurance. It only influenced mammography for those without insurance. Patient activation did not influence either cancer screen behavior. ConclusionThese data demonstrate more nuance is needed to parse potential effects of advocated-for healthcare behaviors. Use of publicly available datasets from can be informative but are limited methodologically. Practice implicationsHealthcare providers and systems should promote use of patient portals and other electronic means of interaction outside regular clinical visits for all patients. However, attention needs to be paid to the unequal benefits they afford to patients.
Read full abstract