Pilot study of a Spanish language measure of financial toxicity in underserved Hispanic cancer patients with low English proficiency

Financial toxicity (FT) reflects multi-dimensional personal economic hardships borne by cancer patients. It is unknown whether measures of FT-to date derived largely from English-speakers-adequately capture economic experiences and financial hardships of medically underserved low English proficiency...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in psychology 2023-07, Vol.14, p.1188783-1188783
Hauptverfasser: Shi, Julia J, McGinnis, Gwendolyn J, Peterson, Susan K, Taku, Nicolette, Chen, Ying-Shiuan, Yu, Robert K, Wu, Chi-Fang, Mendoza, Tito R, Shete, Sanjay S, Ma, Hilary, Volk, Robert J, Giordano, Sharon H, Shih, Ya-Chen T, Nguyen, Diem-Khanh, Kaiser, Kelsey W, Smith, Grace L
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Zusammenfassung:Financial toxicity (FT) reflects multi-dimensional personal economic hardships borne by cancer patients. It is unknown whether measures of FT-to date derived largely from English-speakers-adequately capture economic experiences and financial hardships of medically underserved low English proficiency US Hispanic cancer patients. We piloted a Spanish language FT instrument in this population. We piloted a Spanish version of the Economic Strain and Resilience in Cancer (ENRICh) FT measure using qualitative cognitive interviews and surveys in un-/under-insured or medically underserved, low English proficiency, Spanish-speaking Hispanics (UN-Spanish,  = 23) receiving ambulatory oncology care at a public healthcare safety net hospital in the Houston metropolitan area. Exploratory analyses compared ENRICh FT scores amongst the UN-Spanish group to: (1) un-/under-insured English-speaking Hispanics (UN-English,  = 23) from the same public facility and (2) insured English-speaking Hispanics (INS-English,  = 31) from an academic comprehensive cancer center. Multivariable logistic models compared the outcome of severe FT (score > 6). UN-Spanish Hispanic participants reported high acceptability of the instrument (only 0% responded that the instrument was "very difficult to answer" and 4% that it was "very difficult to understand the questions"; 8% responded that it was "very difficult to remember resources used" and 8% that it was "very difficult to remember the burdens experienced"; and 4% responded that it was "very uncomfortable to respond"). Internal consistency of the FT measure was high (Cronbach's  = 0.906). In qualitative responses, UN-Spanish Hispanics frequently identified a total lack of credit, savings, or income and food insecurity as aspects contributing to FT. UN-Spanish and UN-English Hispanic patients were younger, had lower education and income, resided in socioeconomically deprived neighborhoods and had more advanced cancer vs. INS-English Hispanics. There was a higher likelihood of severe FT in UN-Spanish (OR = 2.73, 95% CI 0.77-9.70;  = 0.12) and UN-English (OR = 4.13, 95% CI 1.13-15.12;  = 0.03) vs. INS-English Hispanics. A higher likelihood of severely depleted FT coping resources occurred in UN-Spanish (OR = 4.00, 95% CI 1.07-14.92;  = 0.04) and UN-English (OR = 5.73, 95% CI 1.49-22.1;  = 0.01) vs. INS-English. The likelihood of FT did not differ between UN-Spanish and UN-English in both models (  = 0.59 and  = 0.62 respectively). In medically un
ISSN:1664-1078
1664-1078
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1188783