In a recent study, unemployed individuals were less likely to have health insurance and to be up to date on getting recommended cancer screening tests. Analyses revealed that lack of health insurance coverage completely accounted for their lower screening rates, according to findings published by Wiley online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, unemployment rates in the United States have risen to levels not seen since the Great Depression. To examine associations between unemployment, health insurance, and cancer screening, Stacey Fedewa, PhD, of the American Cancer Society, and her colleagues analyzed information from adults under 65 years of age who responded to the 2000–2018 National Health Interview Survey, a nationally representative annual survey of the general population.

Unemployed adults were four times more likely to lack insurance than employed adults (41.4% versus 10.0%). A lower proportion of unemployed adults had received up-to-date cervical (78.5% versus 86.2%), breast (67.8% versus 77.5%), colorectal (41.9% versus 48.5%), and prostate (25.4% versus 36.4%) cancer screening. These differences were eliminated after accounting for health insurance coverage.

“People who were unemployed at the time of the survey were less likely to have a recent cancer screening test, and they were also less likely to be up-to-date with their cancer screenings over the long term,” Fedewa says. “This suggests that being unemployed at a single point in time may hinder both recent and potentially longer-term screening practices.” 

This can increase a person’s risk of being diagnosed with late-stage cancer, she adds, which is more difficult to treat than cancer that is detected at an early stage.

“Our finding that insurance coverage fully accounted for unemployed adults’ lower cancer screening utilization is potentially good news, because it’s modifiable,” Fedewa says. “When people are unemployed and have health insurance, they have screening rates that are similar to employed adults.”

The findings point to the importance of insurance coverage for enabling individuals to receive recommended cancer screening tests and indicate that greater efforts are needed to offer insurance to all people, regardless of their employment status.