Impact of Urban Neighborhood Disadvantage on Late Stage Breast Cancer Diagnosis in Virginia

Research suggests that residents of inner-city urban neighborhoods have higher rates of late stage cancer diagnosis. Identifying urban neighborhoods with high rates of both concentrated disadvantage and late stage cancer diagnosis may assist health care providers to target screening interventions to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of urban health 2017-04, Vol.94 (2), p.199-210
Hauptverfasser: DeGuzman, Pam Baker, Cohn, Wendy F., Camacho, Fabian, Edwards, Brandy L., Sturz, Vanessa N., Schroen, Anneke T.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Research suggests that residents of inner-city urban neighborhoods have higher rates of late stage cancer diagnosis. Identifying urban neighborhoods with high rates of both concentrated disadvantage and late stage cancer diagnosis may assist health care providers to target screening interventions to reduce disparities. The purposes of this study were to (1) create an index to evaluate concentrated disadvantage (CD) using non-racial measures of poverty, (2) determine the impact of neighborhood CD on late stage breast cancer diagnosis in US cities, and (3) to understand the role of obesity on this relationship. We used census block group- (CBG) level poverty indicators from five Virginia cities to develop the index. Breast cancer cases of women aged 18–65 who lived in the five cities were identified from the 2000–2012 Virginia Cancer Registry. A logistic regression model with random intercept was used to evaluate the impact of disadvantage on late stage breast cancer diagnosis. CBG-level maps were developed to geographically identify neighborhoods with both high rates of CD and late breast cancer staging. Over 900 CBGs and 6000 breast cases were included. Global fit of the concentrated disadvantage model was acceptable. The effect of disadvantage on late stage was significant (OR = 1.0083, p  = 0.032). Inner-city poverty impacts risk of late stage breast cancer diagnosis. Area-level obesity is highly correlated with neighborhood poverty ( ρ  = 0.74, p  
ISSN:1099-3460
1468-2869
DOI:10.1007/s11524-017-0142-5