Literature DB >> 8289099

Predictors of failure to attend scheduled mammography appointments at a public teaching hospital.

K L Margolis1, N Lurie, P G McGovern, J S Slater.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify patient, institutional, and physician characteristics that predict failure to attend scheduled mammography appointments.
DESIGN: Retrospective chart review.
SETTING: Medicine clinic at an urban public teaching hospital. PATIENTS: All 907 women aged 40 years and more scheduled for mammography from March 1990 to June 1991.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: The main outcome measure was whether a woman kept her scheduled mammography appointment. Potential predictor variables included patient age, race, marital status, and insurance status; waiting interval to obtain a mammography appointment; and physician gender, level of training, country of training, and native language. The rate of failed mammography appointments was 23%. Univariate analysis showed that appointment failure was associated with age (p = 0.03), with the lowest failure rates (19%) among women aged 60 years and more. Appointment keeping varied significantly by race (p = 0.01), largely because of the higher failure rate among Native American women (36%). Insured women had a failure rate of 22% vs 33% for uninsured women (p = 0.01). The rate of failed appointments varied significantly by waiting interval (p = 0.05), with a peak failure rate of 27% for appointments scheduled 14-27 days in advance. None of the physician variables was associated with appointment failure. Multivariate analysis confirmed these results.
CONCLUSIONS: Interventions to improve completion of breast cancer screening should include additional efforts targeted at groups with high rates of appointment failure, such as women under the age of 60, the uninsured, and Native Americans. Long waiting intervals to obtain mammography appointments may decrease compliance.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8289099     DOI: 10.1007/BF02599713

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gen Intern Med        ISSN: 0884-8734            Impact factor:   5.128


  18 in total

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  6 in total

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Journal:  Am Indian Cult Res J       Date:  2009-09-01

3.  A test of two interventions to improve compliance with scheduled mammography appointments.

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Authors:  N C Dolan; D R Reifler; M M McDermott; W C McGaghie
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5.  Racial differences in no-show rates for screening mammography.

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6.  Intervention Mapping to Adapt Evidence-Based Interventions for Use in Practice: Increasing Mammography among African American Women.

Authors:  Linda Highfield; Marieke A Hartman; Patricia Dolan Mullen; Serena A Rodriguez; Maria E Fernandez; L Kay Bartholomew
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  6 in total

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