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Determinants of prostate cancer stage in northern New England: USA Franco-American contextual effects

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  • Parsons, Margaret A.
  • Askland, Kathleen D.

Abstract

Despite screening for prostate cancer, mortality in the United States remains substantial. In northern New England, we know little about either determinants of stage at diagnosis--an important predictor of survival--or health outcomes for Franco-Americans, the region's largest ethnic minority. The objective of this investigation was to identify predictors of late prostate cancer stage in a rural, predominantly white state with a large Franco-American population. The Maine Cancer Registry provided incident cases from 1995 to 1998. We modeled individual-level variables (age, sex, race, French ethnicity by surname, and payer) and contextual/town-level variables (socioeconomic measures, population density, Franco ancestry proportion, distance to health care, and weather severity) with multiple logistic regression for late stage. We found that age categories 50-64, 65-74, and 75-84 years--but not 40-49 years--(versus 85+) were protective for late stage, as was residence in higher snowfall areas. Diagnosis in the earlier years of the study, particularly for French-surnamed men, and residence in a high-Franco area conferred greater risk for late disease. However, in a two-way interaction, residence in towns with high Franco ancestry proportion protected French-surnamed men (OR=0.09, type 3 p

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  • Parsons, Margaret A. & Askland, Kathleen D., 2007. "Determinants of prostate cancer stage in northern New England: USA Franco-American contextual effects," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 65(10), pages 2018-2030, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:socmed:v:65:y:2007:i:10:p:2018-2030
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