Abstract
Purpose
In 1999, the Korean government introduced the National Cancer Screening Program (NCSP) to increase the cancer-screening rate, particularly among the low-income population. This study investigates how the NCSP has decreased both relative and absolute income inequalities in the uptake of cancer screening in South Korea.
Methods
A nationally representative cross-sectional repeated data from the Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 1998–2012, managed by the Ministry of Health and Welfare, was used to assess changes over time and the extent of discontinuity at the NCSP-recommended initiation age in the uptake of screening for breast, colorectal, and gastric cancers across income quartiles.
Results
Relative inequalities in the uptake of screening for all cancers decreased significantly over the policy period. Absolute inequalities did not change for most cancers, but marginally increased from 9 to 14 % points in the uptake of screening for colorectal cancer among men. At the recommended initiation age, absolute inequalities did not change for breast and colorectal cancers but increased from 5 to 16 % points for gastric cancer, for which relative inequality significantly decreased.
Conclusions
The NCSP, which reduced out-of-pocket payment, may not decrease absolute gap although it leads to overall increases in the uptake of cancer screening and decreases in relative inequalities. Further investigations are needed to understand barriers that prevent the low-income population from attending cancer screening.
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Notes
As the 2005 survey asked whether people participated in colorectal cancer screening within 5 years, we used the answer as our dependent variable for that year.
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Acknowledgments
This project was conducted with the support of the Takemi Program in International Health at Harvard School of Public Health. We thank Rockli Kim for her assistance with English editing.
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Kim, S., Kwon, S. & Subramanian, S.V. Has the National Cancer Screening Program reduced income inequalities in screening attendance in South Korea?. Cancer Causes Control 26, 1617–1625 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10552-015-0655-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10552-015-0655-8