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- Title
Healthcare Factors for Obtaining a Mammogram in Latinas With a Variable Mammography History.
- Authors
Scheel, John R.; Molina, Yamile; Coronado, Gloria D.; Bishop, Sonia; Doty, Sarah; Jimenez, Ricardo; Thompson, Beti; Lehman, Constance D.; Beresford, Shirley A. A.
- Abstract
Purpose/Objectives: To understand the relationship between mammography history and current thoughts about obtaining a mammogram among Latinas and examine the mediation effects of several healthcare factors. Design: Cross-sectional survey. Setting: Federally qualified health centers (Sea Mar Community Health Centers) in western Washington. Sample: 641 Latinas nonadherent and adherent with screening mammography. Methods: Baseline survey data from Latinas with a mammography history of never, not recent (more than two years), or recent (less than two years) were analyzed. Preacher and Hayes methods were used to estimate the mediation effect of healthcare factors. Main Research Variables: The survey assessed mammography history, sociodemographic and healthcare factors, and current thoughts about obtaining a mammogram. Findings: Latinas' thoughts about obtaining a mammogram were associated with mammography history. Having had a clinical breast examination mediated 70% of differences between Latinas with a never and recent mammography history. Receipt of a provider recommendation mediated 54% of differences between Latinas with and without a recent mammography history. Conclusions: These findings emphasize the importance of the patient-provider relationship during a clinic visit and help inform how nurses may be incorporated into subsequent screening mammography interventions tailored to Latinas. Implications for Nursing: As providers, health educators, and researchers, nurses have critical roles in encouraging adherence to screening mammography guidelines among Latinas.
- Subjects
WASHINGTON (State); BREAST tumor prevention; BREAST exams; MAMMOGRAMS; CHI-squared test; COMMUNITY health services; CONFIDENCE intervals; EMPLOYMENT; HEALTH services accessibility; HISPANIC Americans; IMMIGRANTS; HEALTH insurance; MEDICAL cooperation; PATIENT-professional relations; NURSES; PATIENT compliance; PATIENT education; RESEARCH; RESEARCH funding; SELF-evaluation; STATISTICS; SURVEYS; WOMEN'S health; MULTIPLE regression analysis; OCCUPATIONAL roles; SECONDARY analysis; SOCIOECONOMIC factors; EDUCATIONAL attainment; RANDOMIZED controlled trials; PLANNED behavior theory; CROSS-sectional method; FAMILY history (Medicine); DATA analysis software; STATISTICAL models; EARLY detection of cancer
- Publication
Oncology Nursing Forum, 2017, Vol 44, Issue 1, p66
- ISSN
0190-535X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1188/17.ONF.66-76