| Literature DB >> 33163554 |
Swapna Reddy1, Mary Saxon1, Nina Patel1, Matthew Speer1, Tiffany Ziegler2, Nirali Patel3, Madison Ziegler1, Stephany Esquivel1, Andrea Daniella Mata4, Asha Devineni5, Pooja Paode1, Nitika Thawani6, Subhakar Mutyala6.
Abstract
Despite comparable screening and incidence rates that are 26% below that of non-Hispanic Whites, Hispanic women present with breast cancer at more advanced stages of disease, representing a continuing and troubling health disparity for this population. Reducing these disparities warrant more innovative research approaches to better understand perspectives of Hispanic patients regarding barriers to treatment and how these perspectives compare to those of their providers. A pilot qualitative study was conducted at a major urban cancer center in Arizona that measured both patient and provider perspectives regarding barriers to treatment. Through a multimethod qualitative analysis, researchers surveyed patients and providers to identify perceived barriers and discordance in shared understanding. Data collection and analysis consisted of surveying patients and providers, then performing inductive qualitative analysis. Results indicated the highest concordance, or shared understanding, between patients and providers was in recognizing barriers within delivery of care, such as cost of care and insurance coverage. The greatest discordance, or gaps in shared understanding, existed in upstream barriers of the health care system, such as emotional support and trust in systems. These results underscore the gap in shared understanding between patients and providers regarding upstream barriers to care as well as the nonclinical social determinants of health Hispanic patients face in accessing breast cancer treatment. More research is warranted using this approach as a tool to reduce health disparities.Entities:
Keywords: Hispanic women; breast cancer; health disparities; health equity; patient focus; provider-patient relationship; social determinants of health
Year: 2020 PMID: 33163554 PMCID: PMC7644129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Patient Cent Res Rev ISSN: 2330-068X