Lack of health insurance hinders recommended cancer screening in unemployed adults: Wiley
2021 NOV 18 (NewsRx) -- By a
During the COVID-19 pandemic, unemployment rates in
Unemployed adults were four times more likely to lack insurance than employed adults (41.4% versus 10.0%). A lower proportion of unemployed adults had received up-to-date cervical (78.5% versus 86.2%), breast (67.8% versus 77.5%), colorectal (41.9% versus 48.5%), and prostate (25.4% versus 36.4%) cancer screening. These differences were eliminated after accounting for health insurance coverage.
“People who were unemployed at the time of the survey were less likely to have a recent cancer screening test and they were also less likely to be up-to-date with their cancer screenings over the long term. This suggests that being unemployed at a single point in time may hinder both recent and potentially longer-term screening practices,” said
“Our finding that insurance coverage fully accounted for unemployed adults’ lower cancer screening utilization is potentially good news, because it’s modifiable,”
The findings point to the importance of insurance coverage for enabling individuals to receive recommended cancer screening tests and indicate that greater efforts are needed to offer insurance to all people, regardless of their employment status.
Additional Information
NOTE: The information contained in this release is protected by copyright. Please include journal attribution in all coverage. A free abstract of this article will be available via the
Full Citation:
“Unemployment and cancer screening: Baseline estimates to inform health care delivery in the context of COVID-19 economic distress.”
URL Upon Publication: http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/cncr.33966
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