Article

Factors Associated with Never Being Screened for Colorectal Cancer.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 4770 Buford Hwy NE, MS K-52, Atlanta, GA, 30341, USA.
Journal of Community Health (impact factor: 1.28). 08/2012; DOI:10.1007/s10900-012-9600-x
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Colorectal cancer (CRC) screening is underused in the United States, and non-adherence with screening recommendations is high in some populations. This study describes the characteristics of people who have never been screened for CRC. In addition, we use the health belief model to examine the constructs associated with screening behavior. We used data from the 2010 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) to create three study outcomes: people who have been screened for CRC and are up-to-date with current recommendations, people who have been screened but are not up-to-date, and people who have never been screened. We used multivariate logistic regression modeling to calculate predicted marginal estimates examining the associations between the screening outcomes and demographic and Health Belief Model (HBM) characteristics. Overall 29 % of respondents had never been screened for CRC. In the adjusted model, 36.6 % of US adults age 50-59 years and 29.1 % of US men reported never being screened for CRC. More Asian/Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, non-Hispanics (38.2 %) reported never being screened than members of other racial and ethnic groups. Nearly 37 % of people with less than a high school diploma reported never being screened. We found statistically significant differences among screening outcomes for all demographics and HBM constructs except could not see a doctor because of costs in the last 12 months, where approximately 29 % reported no CRC screening. New interventions should focus on those subpopulations that have never been screened for CRC.

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Keywords

2010 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
 
adjusted model
 
Asian/Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander
 
Colorectal cancer
 
CRC screening
 
demographic
 
ethnic groups
 
Health Belief Model
 
last 12 months
 
marginal estimates
 
multivariate logistic regression modeling
 
New interventions
 
populations
 
respondents
 
school diploma
 
screening behavior
 
screening outcomes
 
screening recommendations
 
statistically significant differences
 
United States
 

Sandte L Stanley