Counties eliminating racial disparities in colorectal cancer mortality

George Rust, Shun Zhang, Zhongyuan Yu, Lee Caplan, Sanjay Jain, Turgay Ayer, Luceta McRoy, Robert S. Levine

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND Although colorectal cancer (CRC) mortality rates are declining, racial-ethnic disparities in CRC mortality nationally are widening. Herein, the authors attempted to identify county-level variations in this pattern, and to characterize counties with improving disparity trends. METHODS The authors examined 20-year trends in US county-level black-white disparities in CRC age-adjusted mortality rates during the study period between 1989 and 2010. Using a mixed linear model, counties were grouped into mutually exclusive patterns of black-white racial disparity trends in age-adjusted CRC mortality across 20 three-year rolling average data points. County-level characteristics from census data and from the Area Health Resources File were normalized and entered into a principal component analysis. Multinomial logistic regression models were used to test the relation between these factors (clusters of related contextual variables) and the disparity trend pattern group for each county. RESULTS Counties were grouped into 4 disparity trend pattern groups: 1) persistent disparity (parallel black and white trend lines); 2) diverging (widening disparity); 3) sustained equality; and 4) converging (moving from disparate outcomes toward equality). The initial principal component analysis clustered the 82 independent variables into a smaller number of components, 6 of which explained 47% of the county-level variation in disparity trend patterns. CONCLUSIONS County-level variation in social determinants, health care workforce, and health systems all were found to contribute to variations in cancer mortality disparity trend patterns from 1990 through 2010. Counties sustaining equality over time or moving from disparities to equality in cancer mortality suggest that disparities are not inevitable, and provide hope that more communities can achieve optimal and equitable cancer outcomes for all.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1735-1748
Number of pages14
JournalCancer
Volume122
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jun 2016

Keywords

  • African American
  • black
  • cancer mortality
  • colorectal cancer
  • disparities
  • geographic variation
  • health equity
  • local-area variation
  • race
  • trends

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