Abstract
Background: During the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, US unemployment rates rose to historic highs, and they remain nearly double those of prepandemic levels. Employers are the most common source of health insurance among nonelderly adults. Thus, job loss may lead to a loss of health insurance and reduce access to cancer screening. This study examined associations between unemployment, health insurance, and cancer screening to inform the pandemic's potential impacts on early cancer detection. Methods: Up-to-date and past-year breast, cervical, colorectal, and prostate cancer screening prevalences were computed for nonelderly respondents (aged <65 years) with 2000-2018 National Health Interview Survey data. Multivariable logistic regression models with marginal probabilities were used to estimate unemployed-versus-employed unadjusted and adjusted prevalence ratios. Results: Unemployed adults (2000-2018) were 4 times more likely to lack insurance than employed adults (41.4% vs 10.0%; P
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CITATION STYLE
Fedewa, S. A., Yabroff, K. R., Bandi, P., Smith, R. A., Nargis, N., Zheng, Z., … Jemal, A. (2022). Unemployment and cancer screening: Baseline estimates to inform health care delivery in the context of COVID-19 economic distress. Cancer, 128(4), 737–745. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.33966
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