Using mammograms to predict preventive health services behavior and mortality in women

This study examined whether mammography receipt was associated with mortality due to causes other than breast cancer, hypothesizing that mammography screening was a proxy for the predisposition to seek preventive health behaviors. Using data on 89,574 women from the 2000 National Health Interview Su...

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Main Authors: Bilikisu Elewonibi, Patricia Y. Miranda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-03-01
Series:Preventive Medicine Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335516301279
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author Bilikisu Elewonibi
Patricia Y. Miranda
author_facet Bilikisu Elewonibi
Patricia Y. Miranda
author_sort Bilikisu Elewonibi
collection DOAJ
description This study examined whether mammography receipt was associated with mortality due to causes other than breast cancer, hypothesizing that mammography screening was a proxy for the predisposition to seek preventive health behaviors. Using data on 89,574 women from the 2000 National Health Interview Survey and National Death Index, a discrete-time hazard model estimated the mortality from any cause except breast cancer as a function of screening status. Receiving a mammogram was associated with a 24% reduction in the likelihood of death all causes except breast cancer. These odds were reduced to 21.1% when demographic and socioeconomic variables are added and reduced further to 20.9% when health resource variables were added. The final adjusted model shows that women who received a mammogram had reduced their probability of death by 20%. These results suggest women who undergo mammograms may be more likely to seek other preventive health services or engage in healthy behaviors that affect mortality. While the use of mammograms to predict breast cancer mortality merits further consideration, if a proxy for a woman's predisposition for additional preventive screenings, encouraging mammography may be a pivotal pathway for preventing mortality due to other causes for women.
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spelling doaj.art-f0202d29d4004a18ae282fa0fa424a892022-12-22T00:49:00ZengElsevierPreventive Medicine Reports2211-33552017-03-015C273210.1016/j.pmedr.2016.10.012Using mammograms to predict preventive health services behavior and mortality in womenBilikisu ElewonibiPatricia Y. MirandaThis study examined whether mammography receipt was associated with mortality due to causes other than breast cancer, hypothesizing that mammography screening was a proxy for the predisposition to seek preventive health behaviors. Using data on 89,574 women from the 2000 National Health Interview Survey and National Death Index, a discrete-time hazard model estimated the mortality from any cause except breast cancer as a function of screening status. Receiving a mammogram was associated with a 24% reduction in the likelihood of death all causes except breast cancer. These odds were reduced to 21.1% when demographic and socioeconomic variables are added and reduced further to 20.9% when health resource variables were added. The final adjusted model shows that women who received a mammogram had reduced their probability of death by 20%. These results suggest women who undergo mammograms may be more likely to seek other preventive health services or engage in healthy behaviors that affect mortality. While the use of mammograms to predict breast cancer mortality merits further consideration, if a proxy for a woman's predisposition for additional preventive screenings, encouraging mammography may be a pivotal pathway for preventing mortality due to other causes for women.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335516301279MammogramsMortalityHealth behaviorScreening behavior
spellingShingle Bilikisu Elewonibi
Patricia Y. Miranda
Using mammograms to predict preventive health services behavior and mortality in women
Preventive Medicine Reports
Mammograms
Mortality
Health behavior
Screening behavior
title Using mammograms to predict preventive health services behavior and mortality in women
title_full Using mammograms to predict preventive health services behavior and mortality in women
title_fullStr Using mammograms to predict preventive health services behavior and mortality in women
title_full_unstemmed Using mammograms to predict preventive health services behavior and mortality in women
title_short Using mammograms to predict preventive health services behavior and mortality in women
title_sort using mammograms to predict preventive health services behavior and mortality in women
topic Mammograms
Mortality
Health behavior
Screening behavior
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335516301279
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