Journal of women's health
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Journal of women's health · May 2019
Chronic Comorbidities and Receipt of Breast Cancer Screening in United States and Foreign-Born Women: Data from the National Health Interview Survey.
Objective: Research is limited on how immigrant status affects provider recommendations and adherence to breast cancer screening among women with chronic conditions. This study examined whether chronic comorbidities are associated with breast cancer screening recommendations and adherence, as well as differences between foreign-born and United States-born women. Materials and Methods: The study examined data from the 2013 and 2015 National Health Interview Survey on women 50-74 years of age (N = 12,425). Chi-square analysis was used to assess relationships between chronic comorbidities (hypertension, diabetes, and obesity) and mammography screening recommendation and adherence (screened in the last 3 years). ⋯ United States-born women, compared with foreign-born women, had higher rates of obesity (28% vs. 24%, p < 0.001) and hypertension (44% vs. 41%, p < 0.001). Compared with normal-weight women, underweight women (odds ratio [OR]: 0.57, confidence interval [CI]: 0.39-0.82) were significantly less likely to report receiving mammograms. In stratified analyses, foreign-born underweight women (OR: 0.25, CI: 0.09-0.68) remained less likely to report receiving mammograms after controlling for years lived in the United States and citizenship status. Conclusion: Public health intervention efforts must encourage mammography screening for both United States-born and foreign-born women, especially those diagnosed with chronic conditions.
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Journal of women's health · May 2019
Bone Mineral Density and Breast Cancer Incidence and Mortality in Postmenopausal Women: A Long-Term Follow-Up Study.
Purpose: To examine whether bone mineral density (BMD) is predictive of breast cancer risk and mortality in a population of early postmenopausal women participating in a medical prevention program in western Austria. Patients and Methods: Between May 1991 and February 1999, lumbar spine BMD was measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (N = 1163, mean age 56.9 ± 5.7 years) or quantitative computed tomography (N = 2283, mean age 56.8 ± 5.4 years) in 3446 women aged ≥50 years. Data on medication and lifestyle factors were collected by questionnaire. Participants were prospectively followed up for breast cancer incidence, and breast cancer patients were followed up for mortality. ⋯ There was no risk reduction when follow-up began 10 years after BMD measurement. There was no association between BMD and all-cause or breast cancer-specific mortality among breast cancer patients, but a trend toward reduced mortality risk in the highest BMD quartile. Conclusions: We hypothesize that BMD is not reflective of estrogen exposure and not predictive of breast cancer risk, at least in young postmenopausal women. Confounders such as vitamin D might underlie low breast cancer risk at high BMD, thus mirroring better health status.
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Journal of women's health · May 2019
Stress and Coping Profiles and Cardiometabolic Risk in Low-Income African American Women.
Background: The complex interplay of psychological stress appraisal, biology, chronically stressful environments, and individual coping mechanisms can impact and tax physiological adaptive processes. This can result in increased cardiometabolic risk (CMR), type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. Underlying mechanisms are not entirely clear and appear to differ significantly based on age, sex, race, and ethnicity. ⋯ The "holding steady" profile had less insulin resistance (IR) and substance use compared to "high substance users" and "high internalizers" profiles. Women who were "holding steady" used less avoidant coping than "high internalizers." Conclusions: Less favorable adjustment processes were associated with IR, as well as significantly higher levels of avoidant coping and substance use. In AA women, awareness of and attention to stress and coping patterns may help attenuate CMR.
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Journal of women's health · May 2019
Prepregnancy Insurance and Timely Prenatal Care for Medicaid Births: Before and After the Affordable Care Act in Ohio.
Background/Objective: Persistent instability in insurance coverage before and after pregnancy among low-income mothers in the United States contributes to delayed prenatal care and poor infant outcomes. States that expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) make public insurance free for many low-income women regardless of parental or pregnancy status. Our objective is to analyze the effects of expanding Medicaid in Ohio on enrollment of pregnant women and receipt of recommended prenatal care. ⋯ We stratified by parity since first-time mothers would be impacted more. Results: We found almost a 12 percentage point increase in enrollment prepregnancy among first-time mothers compared with almost a 6 percentage point increase for parous women. We found significant increases in all screens and vitamins for both groups. TORCH screening increased 8 percentage points and receipt of prenatal vitamins almost 14 percentage points, by the end of 2015 for first-time mothers, compared with 5 and 4 percentage points, respectively, for parous women. Conclusions: Early enrollment and prenatal care for low-income women in Ohio could erode if the state's Medicaid expansion is altered.
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Journal of women's health · May 2019
The Timing Hypothesis: Hormone Therapy for Treating Symptomatic Women During Menopause and Its Relationship to Cardiovascular Disease.
The risks and benefits of menopausal hormonal therapy (HT) have been evaluated extensively over the past three decades. While the efficacy of HT for management of menopausal symptoms, including vasomotor symptoms and vaginal dryness is well established, its relationship to cardiovascular outcomes is complex. The timing hypothesis, which posits that the cardiovascular effects of HT depend on the timing of initiation of HT in relation to menopause, has helped shape our understanding of the cardiovascular outcomes related to HT. ⋯ The WHI trials closed early in 2002 in part because of increased cardiovascular events seen in women on treatment. Subanalysis of the WHI results by age group, and more recent randomized control studies, including the Kronos Early Estrogen and Prevention Study (KEEPS) and Early Versus Late Intervention Trial (ELITE), demonstrate that the risk of adverse cardiovascular events for HT are low for women <60 years of age or within 10 year from menopause. Although current data does not support using HT for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease, it does suggest that HT can be safely used to treat symptoms in appropriately selected women close to menopause.