乳房自我检查对医疗服务不足人群的益处:一项系统综述。

IF 2.9
Caroline M Cassidy, Christopher I Choi, Benjamin Herdman, Taryn K Kilbane, Jessica F Lannen, James P McConnell, Michelle M Moufawad, Beth A Bailey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:乳腺自我检查(BSE)曾被推荐用于早期乳腺癌的检测,以改善预后。然而,由于发现疯牛病不能显著降低死亡率,反而会增加活检病例,造成不必要的伤害,因此在美国不再推荐疯牛病。尽管如此,国际研究人员仍在继续调查疯牛病在医疗服务不足地区的益处。这些研究提出了一种可能性,即疯牛病可能对美国农村有益,那里的人比一般人群面临更高的慢性疾病死亡率。目的:确定疯牛病是否对医疗服务不足的人群有益,从而为乳腺癌筛查建议的潜在重新评估提供信息。设计:系统回顾。数据来源和方法:使用一组术语进行了系统回顾,以确定过去10年内农村和/或服务不足人群中乳腺癌生存和疯牛病的文章。在3个数据库(PubMed, CINAHL和SCOPUS)中检索了200多篇文章,并对它们进行了进一步筛选,包括农村人群患疯牛病的研究,疯牛病对乳腺癌诊断和/或乳腺癌患者死亡率的影响,影响疯牛病疗效的因素,影响妇女患疯牛病意愿的因素,以及疯牛病对乳腺癌意识/行为的影响,以寻求进一步筛查。结果:12篇文章的最终综合表明,BSE与早期乳腺癌检测(4/12)、增加乳腺癌筛查的可及性(2/12)有关,并对农村人群中寻求进一步乳腺癌筛查的妇女产生积极影响(3/12)。该报告还指出,可能需要改进关于乳腺癌和筛查的教育,包括疯牛病的做法,以促进早期乳腺癌检测(3/12)。结论:重新评估目前的建议,以确定是否应对特定人群做出例外,将有助于解决医疗服务不足人群的晚发现和预后不良问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Benefits of breast self-examinations for medically underserved populations: A systematic review.

Benefits of breast self-examinations for medically underserved populations: A systematic review.

Benefits of breast self-examinations for medically underserved populations: A systematic review.

Benefits of breast self-examinations for medically underserved populations: A systematic review.

Background: Breast self-examination (BSE) was previously recommended to help early-stage breast cancer detection to improve prognosis. However, BSE is not recommended in the United States anymore due to the findings that it fails to significantly decrease mortality while increasing biopsy cases, causing unnecessary harm. Nonetheless, international researchers have continued to investigate the benefits of BSE in medically underserved regions. These studies raise the possibility that BSE could be beneficial in rural America, where people face higher mortality from chronic diseases compared to the general population.

Objectives: Determine if BSE has benefits for medically underserved populations to inform a potential reevaluation of breast cancer screening recommendations.

Design: Systematic review.

Data sources and methods: A systematic review was conducted using a set of terms to identify articles on breast cancer survival and BSE in rural and/or underserved populations within the past 10 years. The search yielded over 200 articles across 3 databases (PubMed, CINAHL, and SCOPUS), and they were further screened to include studies that show rural populations performing BSE, effects of BSE in breast cancer diagnosis and/or mortality of breast cancer patients, factors contributing to the efficacy of BSE, factors that affect women's willingness to perform BSE, and effects of BSE on breast cancer awareness/behaviors to seek further screening.

Results: The final synthesis from 12 articles suggests that BSE is associated with early breast cancer detection (4/12), increased accessibility to breast cancer screening (2/12), and positively influence women to seek further breast cancer screening in rural populations (3/12). It also identifies a potential need for improved education on breast cancer and screening, including BSE practices, to promote early breast cancer detection (3/12).

Conclusion: The reevaluation of the current recommendations to determine if exceptions should be made to specific populations would be helpful in addressing late detection and poor prognosis in medically underserved populations.

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