晚期乳腺癌的城乡不平等:风险和获取的空间和社会维度。

Sara McLafferty, Fahui Wang, Lan Luo, Jared Butler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长期以来,城乡之间在健康和获得医疗服务方面的不平等一直是制定卫生政策时所关注的问题。了解这些不平等现象对于规划更有效的公共卫生资源和计划的地理分布至关重要。社会和种族多样化的人群很可能因其对地方环境的不同体验而在健康和福祉方面表现出不同的城乡梯度,但人们对社会和空间不平等之间的相互作用却知之甚少。利用伊利诺伊州癌症登记处的数据,我们调查了总体人口和非裔美国人晚期乳腺癌诊断中的城乡不平等现象,以及社会经济贫困和医疗保健空间获取的影响。我们分析了 1988-92 年至 1998- 2002 年这一时期的变化,这一时期人们对乳腺癌的认识有所提高,接受筛查的机会也有所增加。在这两个时期,生活在城市化程度最高地区的患者晚期诊断风险最高,这表明城市处于不利地位。多层次建模结果表明,城乡之间的风险不平等与地区人口特征的差异以及居住地的社会和空间特征的差异有关。对于非裔美国人乳腺癌患者来说,城乡之间的梯度是相反的,居住在芝加哥市以外的患者风险更高,这表明与健康相关的一系列风险和地方经验阻碍了乳腺癌的早期发现。研究结果强调,在确定癌症预防和治疗计划的位置时,需要将空间和社会目标相结合。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rural - urban inequalities in late-stage breast cancer: spatial and social dimensions of risk and access.

Rural - urban inequalities in health and access to health care have long been of concern in health-policy formulation. Understanding these inequalities is critically important in efforts to plan a more effective geographical distribution of public health resources and programs. Socially and ethnically diverse populations are likely to exhibit different rural - urban gradients in health and well-being because of their varying experiences of place environments, yet little is known about the interplay between social and spatial inequalities. Using data from the Illinois State Cancer Registry, we investigate rural - urban inequalities in late-stage breast cancer diagnosis both for the overall population and for African-Americans, and the impacts of socioeconomic deprivation and spatial access to health care. Changes over time are analyzed from 1988 - 92 to 1998 - 2002, periods of heightened breast cancer awareness and increased access to screening. In both time periods, the risk of late-stage diagnosis is highest among patients living in the most urbanized areas, an indication of urban disadvantage. Multilevel modeling results indicate that rural - urban inequalities in risk are associated with differences in the demographic characteristics of area populations and differences in the social and spatial characteristics of the places in which they live. For African-American breast cancer patients, the rural - urban gradient is reversed, with higher risks among patients living outside the city of Chicago, suggesting a distinct set of health-related risks and place experiences that inhibit early breast cancer detection. Findings emphasize the need for combining spatial and social targeting in locating cancer prevention and treatment programs.

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