| Literature DB >> 33244433 |
Meghan Ayers1, Sharp F Malak2, Sean G Young3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Arkansans have some of the worst breast cancer mortality to incidence ratios in the United States (5th for Blacks, 4th for Whites, 7th overall). Screening mammography allows for early detection and significant reductions in mortality, yet not all women have access to these life-saving services. Utilization in Arkansas is well below the national average, and the number of FDA-approved screening facilities has decreased by 38% since 2001. Spatial accessibility plays an important role in whether women receive screenings.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; GIS; accessibility; mammography; rural health; screening
Year: 2020 PMID: 33244433 PMCID: PMC7681135 DOI: 10.1017/cts.2020.28
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 2059-8661
Description of theoretical demand scenarios for screening mammograms in Arkansas in 2017
| Scenario | Agencies | Operationalized Parameters | Theoretical Demand |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ACOG, ACR, AMA, NCBC, NCCN, SBI | Annual screenings for ages 40–84 | 708,667 |
| 2 | ACS, ASBS, ASCO | Annual screenings for ages 45–54; | 387,522 |
| 3 | IARC | Annual screenings for ages 50–69 | 377,152 |
| 4 | AAFP, ACP, USPSTF | Biennial screenings for ages 50–74 | 221,217 |
AAFP – American Academy of Family Physicians; ACS – American Cancer Society; ACP – American College of Physicians; ACR – American College of Radiologists; ACOG – American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; AMA – American Medical Association; ASBS – American Society of Breast Surgeons; ASCO – American Society of Clinical Oncology; NCBC – National Consortium of Breast Centers; NCCN – National Comprehensive Cancer Network; SBI – Society of Breast Imaging; IARC – International Agency for Research on Cancer; USPSTF – US Preventive Services Task Force.
Fig. 1.Rurality in Arkansas, derived from rural–urban commuting area (RUCA) codes, with the number of women aged 40–84 years in each category noted.
Fig. 2.Distribution of women aged 40–84 years (1 pink dot equals 100 women), along with locations of current screening facilities (gray dots) and travel times to those facilities.
Unallocated theoretical demand for screening mammograms (i.e. the number of mammograms needed to meet scenario guidelines that could not be supplied), stratified by demand scenario, maximum travel time threshold, and rurality. Note that totals are adjusted to reflect the contributions of mobile mammography clinics, while values stratified by rurality are not
| Unallocated Theoretical Demand | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scenario 1 | Scenario 2 | Scenario 3 | Scenario 4 | |
| 30 Minutes | 339,120 | 142,031 | 138,263 | 68,944 |
| Urban core | 90,125 | 23,203 | 22,148 | 8,653 |
| Suburban | 18,767 | 7,340 | 7,180 | 3,296 |
| Large rural | 16,419 | 4,866 | 4,671 | 1,824 |
| Small town | 54,511 | 26,751 | 24,956 | 13,282 |
| Rural | 169,298 | 89,872 | 89,308 | 51,891 |
| 60 Minutes | 291,112 | 28,597 | 27,540 | 3,641 |
| Urban core | 80,671 | 3,426 | 2,562 | 329 |
| Suburban | 15,551 | 335 | 368 | 0 |
| Large rural | 16,043 | 1,951 | 1,848 | 248 |
| Small town | 47,284 | 5,157 | 4,905 | 1,372 |
| Rural | 141,563 | 27,728 | 27,857 | 11,693 |
Fig. 3.Percentage of unallocated theoretical demand for screenings by scenario and travel time threshold. Darker shades indicate a higher proportion of women living in that area lack spatial access to screening.