Clicky

/

Episode 140: Disparities in Faecal Immunochemical Test (FIT) uptake – ethnicity and deprivation matter

In this episode, we talk to Mr James Bailey, a Colorectal Research Fellow from the Nottingham Colorectal Service.

Paper: Sociodemographic Variations in the Uptake of Faecal Immunochemical Tests in Primary Care

Available at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2023.0033

FIT is increasingly used to triage patients with symptoms suggestive of colorectal cancer but variations in use by demographics, ethnicity and socioeconomic status are unknown. We show, in a large regional dataset, that male patients, patients under 65 years, the most deprived patients and ethnic minority groups are less likely to return a FIT sample. It is important that strategies are developed to ensure patients with these protected characteristics are not disadvantaged with the increasing usage of FIT to prioritise urgency of investigations.

Previous Story

I Would Like to Talk About Why Life is so Unequal

Next Story

The smoking ban – an intervention too far?

Latest from Podcast

Skip to toolbar