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Factors associated with hysterectomy among older women from Latin America and the Caribbean
Authors:Daniel A Escobar  Ana M Botero  Miranda G Cash
Institution:1. Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA;2. Department of Psychology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Abstract:ABSTRACT

To identify factors associated with hysterectomy, data collected from 1999–2000 were assessed from seven cities of the Health, Well-Being and Aging in Latin America and the Caribbean Study on 6,549 women, aged 60 years and older. Hysterectomy prevalence ranged from 12.8% in Buenos Aires (Argentina) to 30.4% in Bridgetown (Barbados). The median age for having had a hysterectomy ranged from 45 to 50 years across the cities and was 47 years in the pooled sample. Ethnic differences in hysterectomy rates were partially explained by differences across cities. Factors significantly associated with lower odds for hysterectomy included older age, household crowding conditions, and having public/military or no health insurance, compared to having private health insurance. Women who had three or more children were less likely to have had a hysterectomy, a finding that differs from most previous studies. Socioeconomic position related to rates of hysterectomy in late life rather than hysterectomies earlier in life. However, the nature of these differences varied across birth cohorts. The findings suggested that adverse socioeconomic factors were most likely related to hysterectomy risk by affecting access to health care, whereas parity was most likely acting through an effect on decision-making processes.
Keywords:Crowding  health insurance  hysterectomy  Latin America  older women  parity
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