Determinants of Colorectal Cancer Screening among South Asian Americans.

Journal of Asian health Pub Date : 2022-04-01
Arnab Mukherjea, Salma Shariff-Marco, Juan Yang, Winston Tseng, Latha Palaniappan, Jun Li, Susan L Ivey, Ma Somsouk, Scarlett Lin Gomez
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Abstract

Background: Colorectal cancer screening rates among South Asian Americans are among the lowest of US population groups. Few population-based studies have examined determinants of screening in this population. The purpose of this study was to identify factors associated with colorectal cancer screening among South Asian Americans.

Methods: Data from the 2001-2009 California Health Interview Survey and multivariable logistic regression were used to examine determinants of being non-adherent with colorectal cancer screening recommendations. Independent variables include sociodemographic and healthcare access measures.

Results: Overall, 49% of 459 South Asian Americans were non-adherent to screening recommendations. Characteristics associated with non-adherence were the absence of flu shot, absence of doctor visits, sole use of non-English language at home and ≤40% life spent in the United States. In the multivariable model, screening non-adherence was associated with ≤40% life in the United States (odds ratio [95% confidence interval] 3.0 [1.4-6.5]), use of non-English at home (2.8 [1.0-7.8]) and no flu shot (2.5 [1.3-4.8]). Obese (BMI > 27.5 kg/m2) versus normal-weight patients were less likely to be non-adherent (0.4 [0.2-0.9]).

Conclusions: Length of time in the United States and language spoken at home rather than English proficiency were associated with non-adherence to colorectal cancer screening, reflecting the importance of acculturation and retention of cultural values. Health conditions and behaviors reflecting more proactive healthcare utilization may reinforce the importance of provider recommendations and perceived efficacy of health prevention. Qualitative research would inform cultural tailoring necessary to improve colorectal cancer screening rates among the rapidly growing South Asian American population.

南亚裔美国人进行大肠癌筛查的决定因素。
背景:南亚裔美国人的结直肠癌筛查率是美国人口群体中最低的。很少有基于人群的研究对这一人群进行筛查的决定因素进行研究。本研究旨在确定与南亚裔美国人大肠癌筛查相关的因素:方法:采用 2001-2009 年加利福尼亚州健康访谈调查的数据和多变量逻辑回归来研究不遵守结直肠癌筛查建议的决定因素。自变量包括社会人口学和医疗保健获取措施:总体而言,459 名南亚裔美国人中有 49% 不遵守筛查建议。与不坚持筛查相关的特征有:未注射流感疫苗、未看医生、在家中只使用非英语语言以及在美国生活的时间少于40%。在多变量模型中,不坚持筛查与在美国生活时间≤40%(几率比[95% 置信区间] 3.0 [1.4-6.5])、在家使用非英语(2.8 [1.0-7.8])和未注射流感疫苗(2.5 [1.3-4.8])有关。肥胖(体重指数大于 27.5 kg/m2)患者与正常体重患者相比,不坚持治疗的可能性较小(0.4 [0.2-0.9]):结论:在美国居住时间的长短以及在家中使用的语言而非英语熟练程度与不坚持大肠癌筛查有关,这反映了文化适应和文化价值观保留的重要性。健康状况和行为反映出人们更积极主动地利用医疗保健服务,这可能会加强医疗服务提供者建议的重要性和对健康预防效果的认知。定性研究将为提高快速增长的南亚裔美国人的结直肠癌筛查率提供必要的文化调整信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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