Preventive Medicine Reports (Jul 2024)

Clinician-perceived barriers to cervical cancer screening before and during the COVID-19 pandemic at three US healthcare systems

  • Veronica M. Boratyn,
  • Gaia Pocobelli,
  • Steven J. Atlas,
  • Cheryl R. Clark,
  • Sarah Feldman,
  • Gina Kruse,
  • Anne Marie McCarthy,
  • Meghan Rieu-Werden,
  • Michelle I. Silver,
  • Noel O. Santini,
  • Jasmin A. Tiro,
  • Jennifer S. Haas

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43
p. 102783

Abstract

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Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic posed serious challenges to cancer screening delivery, including cervical cancer. While the impact of the pandemic on deferred screening has been documented, less is known about how clinicians experienced barriers to screening delivery, and, in particular, the role of pre-pandemic barriers to changes reported during the pandemic. Methods: Survey of clinicians who performed ≥ 10 cervical cancer screening tests in 2019 from Mass General Brigham, Kaiser Permanente Washington, and Parkland Health, the healthcare systems participating in the Population-based Research to Optimize the Screening Process (PROSPR II) consortium (administered 10/2020–12/2020, response rate 53.7 %). Results: Prior to the pandemic, clinicians commonly noted barriers to the delivery of cervical cancer screening including lack of staff support (57.6%), interpreters (32.5%), resources to support patients with social barriers to care (61.3%), and discrimination or bias in interactions between staff and patients (31.2%). Clinicians who reported experiencing a given barrier to care before the pandemic were more likely than those who did not experience one to report worsening during the pandemic: lack of staff support (odds ratio 4.70, 95% confidence interval 2.94–7.52); lack of interpreters (8.23, 4.46–15.18); lack of resources to support patients in overcoming social barriers (7.65, 4.41–13.27); and discrimination or bias (6.73, 3.03–14.97). Conclusions: Clinicians from three health systems who deliver cervical cancer screening commonly reported barriers to care. Barriers prior to the pandemic were associated with worsening of barriers during the pandemic. Addressing barriers to cervical cancer screening may promote resilience of care delivery during the next public health emergency.

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