1. Characterizing the Perceived Need for CRC Screening among the Elderly Living in Rural Areas in the Pacific Northwest US: Roles of Miscommunication, Experience of Discrimination, and Dependence.
- Author
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Huang, Qian, Peng, Wei, Han, Jihae, and Mao, Bingjing
- Subjects
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MEDICAL personnel , *RURAL population , *MEDICAL screening , *EARLY detection of cancer , *OLDER people , *DISCRIMINATION in medical care - Abstract
Purpose: Increasing the perceived need for CRC screening can facilitate undertaking CRC screening. This study aims to identify factors associated with the need for CRC screening in rural populations. Design: A cross-sectional online survey. Setting: The survey was conducted in June - September 2022 in the rural areas of Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington, US. Subjects: The subjects of this study were 250 adults (completion rate: 65%) aged 45-75 residing in rural Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington. Measures: Perceived need for CRC screening, internet usage for health purposes, demographics, and intrapersonal, interpersonal, community, and environmental characteristics. Results: Perceived need for CRC screening were negatively associated with patient-provider miscommunication (β = −.23, P <.001) and perceived discrimination (β = −.21, P <.001), cancer fatalism (β = −.16, P <.05), individualism (β = −.15, P <.05), and dependence on community (β = −.11, P <.05), but positively with compliance with social norms (β =.16, P <.05), trust in health care providers (β =.16, P <.05), knowledge about colorectal cancer (β =.12, P <.05). Conclusions: Our study showed potential individual and situational characteristics that might help increase colorectal cancer screening. Future efforts might consider addressing discrimination in health care settings, improving patient-provider communication, and tailoring messaging to reflect the rural culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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