Publication | Open Access
Determinants of late stage diagnosis of breast and cervical cancer: the impact of age, race, social class, and hospital type.
249
Citations
14
References
1991
Year
Racial Health EquityEpidemiology Of CancerGynecologyHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthRacial DisparitiesGynecology OncologyCancer DisparitySocial HealthBlack WomenPublic HealthSocial MedicineCervical HealthHealth PolicyMedicineSocial ClassCancer DiagnosisCancer PrognosisHealth EquityCervical Cancer ScreeningCervical Cancer ManagementCancer EpidemiologyCervical CancerCancer ScreeningSociologyBreast CancerSocial EpidemiologyDemographyOncologyHealth DisparityWomen's HealthLate Stage Diagnosis
Previous studies of the relationship between cancer stage, age, and race have not controlled for social class and health care setting. Logistic regression analyses, using information from the New York State Tumor Registry and area-level social class indicators, demonstrated that, in New York City, older Black, lower class women in public hospitals were 3.75 and 2.54 times more likely to have late stage breast or cervical cancer, respectively, than were younger White, high social class women in non-public hospitals.
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