County-Level Poverty and Barriers to Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening in a Health Education and Patient Navigation Program for Rural and Border Texas Residents.

2020 
The study examined the impact of (1) county-level poverty rates and (2) patient navigation on breast and cervical cancer screening outcomes for women in rural and border counties in Texas reporting barriers to screening. Univariate analyses described the distribution and screening prevalence rates in the sample, while a series of random intercept logistic regression models analyzed mammogram (N = 2326 women aged 40+) and Papanicolaou (Pap; N = 2959 women aged 21–64) screening separately. Mammogram and Pap screening prevalence rates were highest among women who were aged 40–64, Spanish-speaking Latinas, lower educated, attending cancer education events because of the cost of the screenings, patient navigation recipients, living in the south region of Texas, and in counties with high poverty. Although models indicated significant variability in screening rates by county, county-level poverty was only significantly associated with odds of getting Pap screening in adjusted models. Not receiving patient navigation vs. receiving it was associated with lower odds for both mammogram (OR: 0.51, CI: 0.38–0.70) and Pap (OR: 0.69, CI: 0.50–0.94) screenings. County-level variation in screening rates exists for both mammogram and Pap tests and should be considered in the development and implementation of screening interventions in rural and border areas. However, other factors beyond poverty levels may explain the variation.
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