PCD logo

Geographic Examination of COVID-19 Test Percent Positivity and Proportional Change in Cancer Screening Volume, National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program

Yamisha Bermudez, PhD, MPH1; Lia C. Scott, PhD, MPH2; Michele Beckman, MPH3; Amy DeGroff, PhD, MPH3; Kristy Kenney, MPH3; Juzhong Sun, MPH1; Tanner Rockwell4; William Helsel, MS4; William Kammerer4; Amy Sheu4; Jacqueline Miller, MD3; Lisa C. Richardson, MD, MPH3 (View author affiliations)

Suggested citation for this article: Bermudez Y, Scott LC, Beckman M, DeGroff A, Kenney K, Sun J, et al. Geographic Examination of COVID-19 Test Percent Positivity and Proportional Change in Cancer Screening Volume, National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program. Prev Chronic Dis 2022;19:220111. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5888/pcd19.220111.

PEER REVIEWED

Summary

What is already known on this topic?

In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic led to significant declines in cancer screening, including among women served by the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program.

What is added by this report?

The bivariate relationship between COVID-19 test percent positivity and proportional change in cancer screening volume varied across states and over time. We identified states that consistently maintained pre–COVID-19 breast and/or cervical cancer screening volumes despite consistently high COVID-19 test percent positivity.

What are the implications for public health practice?

Identified states may have strategies that can help other states maintain levels of preventive health services during future public health emergencies.

Abstract

Introduction

In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic led to significant declines in cancer screening, including among women served by the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (NBCCEDP). This study examined the spatial association between state-based COVID-19 test percent positivity and proportional change in NBCCEDP screening volume.

Methods

Using the COVID-19 Diagnostic Laboratory Testing dataset, we calculated state-based monthly COVID-19 test percent positivity from July through December 2020 and categorized rates into low, medium, and high groups. We used data from 48 NBCCEDP state awardees to calculate the state-based monthly proportional change in screening volume and compared data for July–December 2020 with the previous 5-year average for those months. We categorized changes in screening volume into large decrease, medium decrease, and minimal change and created maps of the associations between variable subgroups by using bivariate mapping in QGIS.

Results

Bivariate relationships between COVID-19 test percent positivity and proportional change in cancer screening volume varied over time and geography. In 5 of 6 months, 4 states had high COVID-19 test percent positivity and minimal change in breast or cervical cancer screening volume; 2 states had high COVID-19 test percent positivity and minimal change in breast and cervical cancer screening volume.

Conclusion

Some states maintained pre–COVID-19 screening volumes despite high COVID-19 test percent positivity. Follow-up research will be conducted to determine how these states differ from those with consistent decreases in screening volume and identify factors that may have contributed to differences. This information could be useful for planning to maximize NBCCEDP awardees’ ability to maintain screening volume during future public health emergencies.

Top

Introduction

Cancer screening is an effective strategy to reduce breast and cervical cancer morbidity and mortality (1–4). The National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (NBCCEDP) provides breast and cervical cancer screening, diagnostic testing, and cancer treatment referral services to low-income women who are underinsured and uninsured. Funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), NBCCEDP awardees include 50 states, the District of Columbia, and 19 tribal and territorial organizations.

The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted cancer control activities in the US (5). In April 2020, breast and cervical cancer screening volume in the NBCCEDP declined by 87% and 84%, respectively, compared with the previous 5-year average for that month (6). The extent of this decline varied across the US Department of Health and Human Services geographic regions: Region 2, New York, experienced the largest declines in both breast and cervical cancer screening volume, and Region 7, Kansas City, had the smallest declines (6). Place-based surges in COVID-19 infections and related declines in screening volume may lead to delayed cancer diagnosis and treatment and, therefore, geographic disparities in cancer mortality (7).

This study examined the spatial distribution of the association between COVID-19 test percent positivity and proportional changes in NBCCEDP cancer screening volume, by state, during a 6-month period, July through December 2020. We used bivariate maps to identify states with 1) consistently high COVID-19 test percent positivity and large proportional declines in screening volume, 2) consistently high COVID-19 test percent positivity and minimal proportional change in cancer screening volume, and 3) a downward trajectory in COVID-19 test percent positivity and a gradual recovery in cancer screening volume, concurrently, over time. States with high COVID-19 test percent positivity and minimal proportional change in cancer screening volume may be further examined to identify potential strategies to maximize NBCCEDP awardees’ ability to maintain screening volume during future public health emergencies.

Top

Methods

For this descriptive study, we used the COVID-19 Diagnostic Laboratory Testing dataset provided by the US Department of Health and Human Services to create a COVID-19 test percent positivity measure (8). This time-series dataset includes geocoded polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing results reported to state and jurisdictional health departments from more than 1,000 laboratories and testing locations in the US. These data represent diagnostic specimens tested, not individuals (8). To calculate the test percent positivity by state for each month of the 6-month study period, we divided the cumulative number of positive COVID-19 tests by the total number of tests performed per month and multiplied that quotient by 100 (9).

We also used NBCCEDP program data, the minimal data elements (MDEs), that are collected for all women receiving services through the NBCCEDP awardees and reported to CDC (10). Each MDE record describes a screening cycle that starts with receipt of a screening test and follows women through diagnostic follow-up of abnormal test results and, if diagnosed with cancer, a treatment referral. Each encounter of a given cycle with a woman is included in the MDE record; therefore, multiple tests per woman may be included in the MDE record. MDE variables include patient demographic characteristics, screening date, test result, final diagnosis (cancer or no cancer), the date of the final diagnosis, and treatment initiation date, if indicated (11). The MDEs have Office of Management and Budget (no. 0920–0571) and CDC human subjects approvals.

We aggregated MDE records by state and assessed the state-level proportional change in breast cancer screening tests (mammograms) and cervical cancer screening tests (Papanicolaou tests and/or human papillomavirus tests) compared with the previous 5-year average (2015–2019), by month, for the 6-month study period, July–December 2020. To calculate proportional change in cancer screening tests by state for each month of the 6-month study period, we divided the difference in screening tests volume between 2020 and the previous 5-year average (2015–2019) for each state by the previous 5-year average for each state and multiplied the quotient by 100. Data from 48 of the 70 NBCCEDP awardees (48 states) were included in the analysis. We excluded awardees with either insufficient spatial data (all tribal organizations and territories) or missing 2020 data for breast and/or cervical cancer screening (District of Columbia, Massachusetts, and North Carolina).

Data analysis

We used QGIS version 3.16.9 (Open Source Geospatial Foundation) to create a series of bivariate maps to display the associations between COVID-19 test percent positivity and 1) proportional change in NBCCEDP breast cancer screening volume and 2) proportional change in NBCCEDP cervical cancer screening volume. Associations were mapped for each month of the study period, July–December 2020, for a total of 12 maps. We used tertiles to determine bivariate categories for proportional change in screening volume. This method sorted the state-level proportional change in breast and cervical cancer screening volume from lowest to highest value and divided the distribution of the data into 3 equal parts. Proportional changes in breast and cervical cancer screening volume values in the first tertile were considered a large decrease (< −20%), values in the second tertile a medium decrease (−20% to −5%), and values in the third tertile a minimal change (> −5%). This third tertile included states that had a small proportional decrease or increase.

To determine bivariate categories for COVID-19 test percent positivity, we used CDC’s thresholds for community transmission levels of SARS-CoV-2, which account for both the number of new cases and the test percent positivity in the past 7 days. With these thresholds, transmission level is categorized as low (<5.00% positivity), moderate (5.00%–7.99% positivity), substantial (8.00%–9.99% positivity), or high (≥10.00%) (12). For this analysis, we combined substantial and high transmission categories into a single category, high transmission (≥8.00%).

Top

Results

During July–December 2020, a total of 22,465,958,918 COVID-19 tests were performed in the 48 states included in the study, with 1,885,013,432 confirmed positive results. The 6-month average COVID-19 test percent positivity across these states was 8.39%. The monthly test percent positivity gradually declined from July (8.25%) through October (7.31%) and then sharply increased through December (9.11%).

During July–December 2020, a total of 93,166 breast cancer screening tests and 84,721 cervical cancer screening tests were performed by the NBCCEDP state awardees included in the study. Compared with the previous 5-year average for the same 6 months, 21,597 fewer breast cancer screening tests and 21,478 fewer cervical cancer screening tests were performed. We found an average decline of 73.3 breast cancer screening tests and 71.7 cervical cancer screening tests per month in each state. Average proportional declines in breast and cervical cancer screening volume across states more than doubled from September to November 2020 when compared with the previous 5-year average, then improved in December (Table). However, we observed the largest proportional declines in July (−22.9% breast, −24.9% cervical), August (−25.2% breast, −25.5% cervical), and November (−22.7% breast, −24.9% cervical).

Breast cancer screening volume and COVID-19 test percent positivity

Seven states had a bivariate relationship characterized by consistently high COVID-19 test percent positivity and large proportional decreases in breast cancer screening volume (Figure 1). For at least 5 of 6 months, Alabama, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Nebraska, Texas, and Virginia demonstrated this relationship. In contrast, Iowa, Nevada, and Tennessee experienced high COVID-19 test percent positivity and minimal proportional change in breast cancer screening volume in at least 5 of 6 months (Figure 1).

Bivariate visualization of the association between state-level proportional change in NBCCEDP breast cancer screening volume and COVID-19 test percent positivity for each month from July through December 2020. Breast cancer screening volume was based on NBCCEDP minimal data elements submitted in April 2021. Data for the District of Columbia, Massachusetts, and North Carolina and are not displayed because 2020 breast cancer screening data were missing. The change in cancer screening volume was calculated as the difference between the volume during July–December 2020 and the previous 5-year average for those months. Abbreviation: NBCCEDP, National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program.

Return to your place in the text
Figure 1.

Bivariate visualization of the association between state-level proportional change in NBCCEDP breast cancer screening volume and COVID-19 test percent positivity for each month from July through December 2020. Breast cancer screening volume was based on NBCCEDP minimal data elements submitted in April 2021. Data for the District of Columbia, Massachusetts, and North Carolina and are not displayed because 2020 breast cancer screening data were missing. The change in cancer screening volume was calculated as the difference between the volume during July–December 2020 and the previous 5-year average for those months. Abbreviation: NBCCEDP, National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program. [A text version of this figure is available.]

Among states with high COVID-19 test percent positivity, more states concurrently had a large decrease in breast cancer screening volume than a minimal proportional change in 4 of 6 months (Figure 1). For example, among states with high COVID-19 test percent positivity in November, 16 states concurrently had large proportional decreases in breast cancer screening volume and only 5 states had minimal proportional change. However, in September 2020, this relationship was reversed: 8 states had minimal proportional change and 7 states had a large proportional decrease in breast cancer screening volume while concurrently having high COVID-19 test percent positivity. The same number of states (n = 12) showed these 2 bivariate relationships in December 2020.

No state simultaneously demonstrated a downward trajectory in COVID-19 test percent positivity and a gradual recovery in proportional change in breast cancer screening volume over time (Figure 1). Most states with high COVID-19 test percent positivity and large proportional decreases in breast cancer screening volume maintained that relationship through December 2020. Among states with high COVID-19 test percent positivity, few moved back and forth between large and medium proportional decreases in breast cancer screening volume. Georgia showed a gradual recovery in proportional change in breast cancer screening volume while experiencing consistently high COVID-19 test percent positivity. While maintaining high COVID-19 test percent positivity, the proportional change in Georgia’s breast cancer screening volume shifted from a large decrease in July and August, to a medium decrease in September, to a minimal proportional change in October and November. However, in December 2020, the relationship went back to high COVID-19 test percent positivity and medium proportional declines in breast cancer screening volume.

Cervical cancer screening volume and COVID-19 test percent positivity

Eight states consistently experienced high COVID-19 test percent positivity and large decreases in cervical cancer screening volume (Figure 2). In at least 5 of 6 months, Alabama, Florida, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Virginia, and Texas demonstrated this negative association. In contrast, Arkansas, Kansas, Nevada, South Carolina, and Tennessee showed high COVID-19 test percent positivity and minimal proportional change in cervical cancer screening in at least 5 of 6 months.

Bivariate visualization of the association between state-level proportional change in NBCCEDP cervical cancer screening volume and COVID-19 test percent positivity for each month from July through December 2020. Cervical cancer screening volume was based on NBCCEDP minimal data elements submitted in April 2021. Data for the District of Columbia, Massachusetts, and North Carolina and are not displayed because 2020 cervical cancer screening data were missing. The change in cancer screening volume was calculated as the difference between the volume during July–December 2020 and the previous 5-year average for those months. Abbreviation: NBCCEDP, National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program.

Return to your place in the text
Figure 2.

Bivariate visualization of the association between state-level proportional change in NBCCEDP cervical cancer screening volume and COVID-19 test percent positivity for each month from July through December 2020. Cervical cancer screening volume was based on NBCCEDP minimal data elements submitted in April 2021. Data for the District of Columbia, Massachusetts, and North Carolina and are not displayed because 2020 cervical cancer screening data were missing. The change in cancer screening volume was calculated as the difference between the volume during July–December 2020 and the previous 5-year average for those months. Abbreviation: NBCCEDP, National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program. [A text version of this figure is available.]

Among states with high COVID-19 test percent positivity, more states concurrently had a large proportional decrease than a minimal proportional change in cervical cancer screening volume in 5 of 6 months (Figure 2). For example, among states with high COVID-19 test percent positivity in July, 16 states concurrently had large proportional decreases in cervical cancer screening volume and only 9 states had minimal proportional change. However, only 8 states showed these 2 relationships in September. During the 6-month period, we observed the greatest number (n = 17) of states with high COVID-19 test percent positivity and large proportional decreases in cervical cancer screening volume in July. We found the greatest number (n = 10) of states with high COVID-19 test percent positivity and minimal proportional change in cervical cancer screening volume in December.

No states simultaneously demonstrated a downward trajectory in COVID-19 test percent positivity and a gradual recovery in proportional change in cervical cancer screening volume over time. Similar to the patterns for breast cancer, most states with high COVID-19 test percent positivity and large proportional decreases in cervical cancer screening volume maintained that bivariate relationship through December (Figure 2).

Co-location of bivariate relationships

Six states had high COVID-19 test percent positivity and large proportional decreases in screening volume for both breast and cervical cancer in at least 5 of 6 months: Alabama, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Texas, and Virginia. In contrast, Nevada and Tennessee demonstrated a relationship characterized by high COVID-19 test percent positivity and minimal proportional change in screening volume for both cancers in at least 5 of 6 months. Finally, 1 state, Oregon, had low COVID-19 test percent positivity and large proportional decreases in screening volume for both breast and cervical cancer for the first 5 months, July through November.

Top

Discussion

We conducted the first study to our knowledge that examines the geospatial relationship between breast and cervical cancer screening in a large population of low-income women who are uninsured or underinsured, and state-level COVID-19 test percent positivity. Although several studies reported significant declines in cancer screening early in the pandemic (5,6,13), our study aimed to visually describe the relationship between state-level COVID-19 test percent positivity and proportional change in breast and cervical cancer screening volume in the NBCCEDP and how the relationship differed by geography in each month from July through December 2020.

We found substantial variations in COVID-19 test percent positivity over time and geography. Overall, these variations aligned with the temporal and spatial distributions of proportional change in NBCCEDP cancer screening volume, with states mostly showing large proportional declines in cancer screening volume when and where COVID-19 test percent positivity was highest. When we examined bivariate associations by state, the number of states with high COVID-19 test percent positivity and large proportional decreases in cancer screening volume was larger than the number of states with high COVID-19 test percent positivity and minimal proportional change in 4 of 6 months for breast cancer and 5 of 6 months for cervical cancer. However, the same number of states had these relationships for cervical cancer in September 2020 (8 states had high-COVID-19/large decrease and 8 states had high-COVID-19/minimal change) and for breast cancer in December 2020 (12 states for both bivariate relationships). Further research may identify factors that help to explain why we found an equal number of states with high-COVID-19/large decrease and high-COVID-19/minimal change relationships in September and December while we found differences in the number of states with these relationships during other months. Findings from this additional research could inform the development of time-specific strategies that could help states maintain receipt of preventive health services during highly affected points in future public health emergencies. We also found that by November 2020, only 1 state, New York, showed a relationship characterized by low COVID-19 test percent positivity and minimal proportional change in cancer screening volume (the best-case scenario) for breast and cervical cancer. Very few states showed this relationship before November, suggesting that during our study period, the COVID-19 pandemic may have caused an overall lack of capacity to deliver care as health care workers were being pulled to work on the pandemic (14).

Although COVID-19 test percent positivity and proportional change in cancer screening volume among women in the NBCCEDP appear to be influenced by time, both also appear to be influenced by an element of geography. One study found that Region 2, New York, experienced the greatest decline in cancer screening volume in April 2020, and Region 7, Kansas City, experienced the smallest decline (6). However, when we examined the bivariate relationships between COVID-19 test percent positivity and proportional change in NBCCEDP cancer screening volume, we identified other geographic areas most affected during July–December 2020. We found that 6 states showed high COVID-19 test percent positivity and a large proportional decrease in screening volume for both breast and cervical cancer in at least 5 of 6 months during the study period: Alabama, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Texas, and Virginia. Apart from Idaho, all states showing this relationship for breast and cervical cancer are in the Southern region. Some factors that may be associated with the findings for the Southern region include limited access to health care, high poverty rates, and a large African American population (15–19). Over the past 10 years, 138 rural hospitals in the US closed; more than 60% of them were in the South (15). Also, the South has historically had higher poverty rates than other regions. Nearly 84% of persistent-poverty counties (≥20% of their populations living in poverty based on 1980, 1990, and 2000 decennial censuses and 2007–2011 American Community Survey 5-year estimates) were in the South (16). People of low socioeconomic status (SES) are more likely than people with higher SES to have essential jobs, which may prevent them from self-isolating, thereby increasing their risk of COVID-19 exposure (17). Finally, more than half of African American people in the US, who are contracting COVID-19 at a disproportionately higher rate and experiencing worse COVID-19–related outcomes compared with White people, live in the South (18,19). Together these factors are associated with higher risk of COVID-19 exposure in the South than in other regions of the US, and our study results suggest an association between places with higher COVID-19 test percent positivity and larger declines in cancer screening volume. However, in other states, such as Nevada and Tennessee, we found high COVID-19 test percent positivity and minimal proportional change in cancer screening volume for both breast and cervical cancer in at least 5 of 6 months during the study period. Despite consistently high COVID-19 test percent positivity in these states, they maintained pre–COVID-19 breast and cervical cancer screening volumes. Similarly, Georgia’s bivariate relationships over time also stood out: this state gradually moved toward pre–COVID-19 screening volumes despite consistently high COVID-19 positivity rates. We plan to conduct follow-up research to determine what actions taken by these NBCCEDP state awardees and their clinics may have contributed to the consistent maintenance of pre–COVID-19 screening volume or gradual improvement despite high COVID-19 test percent positivity and how these actions differed from those taken by states that consistently showed decreases in screening volume.

Limitations

Our study has several limitations. First, consolidating CDC’s COVID-19 thresholds for determining community transmission levels of SARS-CoV-2 in a different way would likely have resulted in different bivariate patterns in states and over time. Because a systematic review of the literature on COVID-19 spatial analysis indicated no examples of bivariate mapping visualization methods (20), we had no existing categorization approaches to guide our novel analysis. Second, using a different COVID-19 indicator (eg, COVID-19 case rate, case count, hospitalization rate) might have resulted in different patterns in states and over time. We used COVID-19 test percent positivity because the data for this indicator were more complete than other potential indicators across states and during the study period. Third, COVID-19 test percent positivity data represent diagnostic specimens tested. Therefore, COVID-19 test percent positivity depends on the number of tests performed, not the number of people, which could lead to underestimates of COVID-19 test percent positivity. Fourth, although we offered a few likely explanations for some of the bivariate patterns observed, the factors contributing to each of these patterns are unknown and most likely multifactorial. The bivariate relationship between COVID-19 test percent positivity and proportional change in NBCCEDP cancer screening volume observed in each state may have been affected by a combination of factors existing at the county, community, health system, patient, health care provider, or policy levels.

Conclusion

Our geospatial analysis demonstrated geographic differences in the proportional change in cancer screening volume in the NBCCEDP and COVID-19 test percent positivity across the US in the second half of 2020, which allows us to better understand the impact of COVID-19 on the program. Place-based surges in COVID-19 infections and related declines in screening volume may lead to delayed cancer diagnosis and treatment and, therefore, geographic disparities in cancer mortality (7). Additionally, existing disparities in breast and cervical cancer incidence and mortality could be exacerbated, given the disproportionate impact of the pandemic on racial and ethnic minority populations (21). Our study identified states that maintained pre–COVID-19 breast and/or cervical cancer screening volumes despite high COVID-19 test percent positivity during July–December 2020. Follow-up research on these states may inform strategies that can help other states maintain delivery of preventive health services during future public health emergencies.

Top

Acknowledgments

The findings and conclusions in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of CDC. No copyrighted materials were used in this research.

Top

Author Information

Corresponding Author: Yamisha Bermudez, PhD, MPH, Totally Joined for Achieving Collaborative Techniques, 50 Hurt Plaza SE, Ste 1600, Atlanta, GA 30303. Telephone: 404-498-3212. Email: oll4@cdc.gov.

Author Affiliations: 1Totally Joined for Achieving Collaborative Techniques, Atlanta, Georgia. 2Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia. 3Division of Cancer Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia. 4Information Management Services, Inc, Calverton, Maryland.

Top

References

  1. Curry SJ, Krist AH, Owens DK, Barry MJ, Caughey AB, Davidson KW, et al. Screening for cervical cancer: US Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. JAMA 2018;320(7):674–86. CrossRef PubMed
  2. Siu AL; US Preventive Services Task Force. Screening for breast cancer: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. Ann Intern Med 2016;164(4):279–96. CrossRef PubMed
  3. US Preventive Services Task Force. Screening for breast cancer: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. Ann Intern Med 2009;151(10):716–26, W-236. CrossRef PubMed
  4. Moyer VA; US Preventive Services Task Force. Screening for cervical cancer: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. Ann Intern Med 2012;156(12):880–91, W312. CrossRef PubMed
  5. Cancino RS, Su Z, Mesa R, Tomlinson GE, Wang J. The impact of COVID-19 on cancer screening: challenges and opportunities. JMIR Cancer 2020;6(2):e21697. CrossRef PubMed
  6. DeGroff A, Miller J, Sharma K, Sun J, Helsel W, Kammerer W, et al. COVID-19 impact on screening test volume through the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program, January-June 2020, in the United States. Prev Med 2021;151:106559. CrossRef PubMed
  7. Alagoz O, Lowry KP, Kurian AW, Mandelblatt JS, Ergun MA, Huang H, et al. Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on breast cancer mortality in the US: estimates from collaborative simulation modeling. J Natl Cancer Inst 2021;113(11):1484–94. CrossRef PubMed
  8. US Department of Health and Human Services. COVID-19 diagnostic laboratory testing (PCR testing) time series. Accessed March 20, 2021. https://healthdata.gov/dataset/COVID-19-Diagnostic-Laboratory-Testing-PCR-Testing/j8mb-icvb
  9. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. COVID-19 county check. Accessed September 20, 2021. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/more/aboutcovidcountycheck
  10. Breast and Cervical Cancer Mortality and Prevention Act of 1990. Public Law 101-354. Accessed May 27, 2019. https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/STATUTE-104/STATUTE-104-Pg409
  11. Yancy B, Royalty JE, Marroulis S, Mattingly C, Benard VB, DeGroff A. Using data to effectively manage a national screening program. Cancer 2014;120(Suppl 16):2575–83. CrossRef PubMed
  12. Christie A, Brooks JT, Hicks LA, Sauber-Schatz EK, Yoder JS, Honein MA, et al. Guidance for implementing COVID-19 prevention strategies in the context of varying community transmission levels and vaccination coverage. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2021;70(30):1044–7. CrossRef PubMed
  13. Murray A, Kleinrock M. Shifts in healthcare demand, delivery, and care during the COVID-19 era. 2020. IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science. Accessed December 20, 2020. https://www.iqvia.com/insights/the-iqvia-institute/covid-19/shifts-in-healthcare-demand-delivery-and-care-during-the-covid-19-era
  14. Cancino RS, Su Z, Mesa R, Tomlinson GE, Wang J. The impact of COVID-19 on cancer screening: challenges and opportunities. JMIR Cancer 2020;6(2):e21697. CrossRef PubMed
  15. Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research. Rural hospital closures, 2014. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Accessed May 10, 2021. https://www.shepscenter.unc.edu/programs-projects/rural-health/rural-hospital-closures
  16. US Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service. County typology codes, 2015 edition. Accessed March 1, 2022. https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/county-typology-codes
  17. Wolfe R, Harknett K, Schneider D. Inequalities at work and the toll of COVID-19. Health Affairs Health Policy Brief . Published June 4, 2021. doi:10.1377/hpb20210428.863621
  18. Rastogi S, Johnson TD, Hoeffel EM, Drewery MP Jr. The Black population 2010. 2010 Census Brief. 2011 September; C2010BR-06:1-20. US Department of Commerce, US Census Bureau. Accessed June 6, 2021. https://www.census.gov/content/dam/Census/library/publications/2011/dec/c2010br-06.pdf
  19. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Double jeopardy: COVID-19 and behavioral health disparities for Black and Latino Communities in the U.S. 2020. Accessed June 6, 2021. https://www.samhsa.gov/sites/default/files/covid19-behavioral-health-disparities-black-latino-communities.pdf
  20. Fatima M, O’Keefe KJ, Wei W, Arshad S, Gruebner O. Geospatial analysis of COVID-19: a scoping review. Int J Environ Res Public Health 2021;18(5):2336. CrossRef PubMed
  21. Stokes EK, Zambrano LD, Anderson KN, Marder EP, Raz KM, El Burai Felix S, et al. Coronavirus disease 2019 case surveillance — United States, January 22–May 30, 2020. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2020;69(24):759–65. CrossRef PubMed

Top

Table

Return to your place in the text

Table. Monthly Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening Volume for July–December 2020 Compared With Previous 5-Year Average 2015-2019a, National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program
Item July August September October November December
Breast cancer screening volume
2020 13,523 14,525 16,080 18,936 15,347 14,755
5-year average (2015–2019) 17,529 19,467 18,087 22,332 19,832 17,515
Percentage decrease −22.9 −25.2 −11.2 −15.3 −22.7 −16.0
Cervical cancer screening volume
2020 12,354 13,742 15,990 17,453 13,359 11,823
5-year average (2015–2019) 16,432 18,411 17,798 20,980 17,791 14,784
Percentage decrease −24.9 −25.5 −10.2 −16.9 −24.9 −20.1

a Breast and cervical cancer screening volume is based on minimal data elements submitted in April 2021. Screening data exclude North Carolina, Massachusetts, and the District of Columbia because of a lack of 2020 screening data.

Top


The opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors’ affiliated institutions.

Page last reviewed: September 15, 2022