Contemporary nationwide patterns of self-reported prostate-specific antigen screening in US veterans

Urologic Oncology
Daniel PucherilQuoc-Dien Trinh

Abstract

The quality of medical care to US veterans, as provided by the Veterans Health Administration, has recently been subjected to heightened scrutiny. We sought to report prostate-specific antigen screening (PSAS) in a contemporary cohort of veteran men (VM) vs. nonveteran men (NVM). We hypothesize that VM are less likely to receive age-appropriate PSAS compared with NVM. We identified VM and NVM aged 55 to 69 years without history of prostate cancer who underwent PSA testing in the year preceding that of the 2012 Behavioral Risk Factor and Surveillance System survey. The prevalence of PSAS among VM and NVM was determined in aggregate and on a state-by-state basis. Complex samples logistic regression models calculated the odds of PSAS based on veteran status, adjusted for patient/demographic characteristics. In all, 56,962 responses were collected, yielding a weighted estimate of 23.7 million men, of which 30.5% were VM. Overall, 45.2% (CI: 43.9%-46.5%) of VM reported PSAS compared with only 37.5% (CI: 36.5%-38.5%) of NVM. VM were more likely to have health insurance (92.0%; CI: 91.3%-92.8% vs. 86.2%; CI: 85.4%-87.0%) and a regular health care provider (89.0%; CI: 88.2%-89.8% vs. 85.9%; CI: 85.1%-86.6%) compared with NVM. Unadjuste...Continue Reading

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