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Preventive medicine · Jan 2022
Variation in the receipt of human papilloma virus co-testing for cervical screening: Individual, provider, facility and healthcare system characteristics.
- Jennifer S Haas, David Cheng, Liyang Yu, Steven J Atlas, Cheryl Clark, Sarah Feldman, Michelle I Silver, Aruna Kamineni, Jessica Chubak, Gaia Pocobelli, Jasmin A Tiro, and Sarah C Kobrin.
- Division of General Internal Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States of America. Electronic address: Jennifer.Haas@mgh.harvard.edu.
- Prev Med. 2022 Jan 1; 154: 106871106871.
AbstractSince 2012, cervical cancer screening guidelines allow for choice of screening test for women age 30-65 years (i.e., Pap every 3 years or Pap with human papillomavirus co-testing every 5 years). Intended to give patients and providers options, this flexibility reflects a trend in the growing complexity of screening guidelines. Our objective was to characterize variation in cervical screening at the individual, provider, clinic/facility, and healthcare system levels. The analysis included 296,924 individuals receiving screening from 3626 providers at 136 clinics/facilities in three healthcare systems, 2010 to 2017. Main outcome was receipt of co-testing vs. Pap alone. Co-testing was more common in one healthcare system before the 2012 guidelines (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) of co-testing at the other systems relative to this system 0.00 and 0.50) but was increasingly implemented over time in a second with declining uptake in the third (2017: AORs shifted to 7.32 and 0.01). Despite system-level differences, there was greater heterogeneity in receipt of co-testing associated with providers than clinics/facilities. In the three healthcare systems, providers in the highest quartile of co-testing use had an 8.35, 8.81, and 25.05-times greater odds of providing a co-test to women with the same characteristics relative to the lowest quartile. Similarly, clinics/ facilities in the highest quartile of co-testing use had a 4.20, 3.14, and 6.56-times greater odds of providing a co-test relative to the lowest quartile. Variation in screening test use is associated with health system, provider, and clinic/facility levels even after accounting for patient characteristics.Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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