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Volume 32, Issue 4: August, 2005
Abstract
*Correlates of Mammography Screening Among Hispanic Women
Living in Lower Rio Grande Valley Farmworker Communities
Richard C. Palmer, DrPH, Maria E. Fernandez, PhD, Guillermo
Tortolero-Luna, MD, PhD, Alicia Gonzales, MSSW, and Patricia
Dolan Mullen, DrPH
Factors contributing to the underuse of mammography screening
by female Hispanic farmworkers aged 50 years and older in
the Lower Rio Grande Valley were determined through home-based,
Spanish-language personal interviews (N = 200). Questions
covered adherence to screening mammography guidelines (mammogram
within 2 years), health care access, sociodemographic characteristics,
and theoretical constructs related to breast cancer screening
in the literature. Multivariate findings indicated that adherent
women were 3.6 times more likely to have health insurance.
Self-efficacy for obtaining a mammogram and decisional balance
were also significantly related to adherence; age, income,
and education variables were not associated, perhaps because
of restricted variation. Results indicate continuing efforts
are needed to ensure that medically underserved migrant farmworker
women have access to health care services. In addition, efforts
to increase their self-efficacy in obtaining a mammogram and
to counter negative attitudes and opinions by stressing the
positive prognosis associated with early detection are warranted.
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