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Volume 30, Issue 3: June, 2003
Abstract
Access and Attitudinal Factors Related to Breast and Cervical
Cancer Rescreening: Why Are Latinas Still Underscreened?
Regina Otero-Sabogal, PhD, Susan Stewart, PhD, Fabio Sabogal,
PhD, Beth A. Brown, MA,
and Eliseo J. Pérez-Stable, MD
To identify access, attitudes, and health practices of Latina
women undergoing regular mammography and Pap smear screening,
977 Latinas aged 40 to 74, residing in four California cities,
answered a telephone inter-view. Forty-one percent of women
had regular mammography, and 73% had regular Pap smear screening.
Cancer screening maintenance was associated with having health
insurance, a regular place of care, and fewer fatalistic attitudes
about cancer. Regular mammography and Pap smear screening
were also associated with ever being married, attending church,
and having taken hormone replacement therapy. Being older
than 50, residing in the United States a long time, and having
had a hysterectomy predicted mammography maintenance. Pap
smear screening maintenance was negatively associated with
poverty, old age, and negative attitudes toward physicians.
There are structural and attitudinal barriers to regular cancer
screening among Latinas. Interventions that increase access
to care and address women’s attitudes about cancer are
needed.
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