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      Keeping mammography referral appointments: motivation, health beliefs, and access barriers experienced by older minority women.

      Journal of midwifery & women's health
      African Americans, Aged, Asian Americans, Attitude to Health, ethnology, Boston, Breast Neoplasms, prevention & control, Female, Health Services Needs and Demand, Health Services for the Aged, Hispanic Americans, Humans, Mammography, psychology, Middle Aged, Minority Groups, Motivation, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Referral and Consultation, Women's Health

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          Abstract

          Older women of color tend to have much lower rates of regular mammography screening for breast cancer than younger Caucasian women; yet, they have higher rates of mortality. This study was designed to increase mammography rates among inner-city women aged 50 years or older. Another goal was to investigate differences in mammography utilization related to race/ethnicity and language after barriers associated with cost and the difficulty of making an appointment are removed. A peer delivered intervention, which consisted of interview, mammography referral, and the scheduling of a next-day appointment, was conducted among a convenience sample of 151 culturally and racially diverse older women through a primary care referral project operating within an urban emergency department (ED). A brief motivational interview and mammography referral at the time of an ED visit, including scheduling of a next-day no cost appointment, was followed by a cross-sectional telephone survey of utilization and motivating and hindering factors. Follow-up was achieved with 96 women (66%). Fifty-eight women (60%) had a post-intervention mammogram; of those, 69% were first time users. More than 90% planned a repeat mammogram the following year. Of the 27 who did not receive a mammogram, 21 (77%) requested a "second try" appointment. These findings demonstrate that an interactive intervention among older women of color has the potential to dramatically increase mammography rates.

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