Department of Economics, University of New Brunswick, PO Box 4400, Fredericton, NB, Canada E3B 5A3.
Soc Sci Med. 2010 May;70(9):1396-403. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.01.008. Epub 2010 Feb 12.
This article identifies the extent to which demographic, socio-economic and geographic factors account for differences between Inuit and other Northern Canadian residents in health-related behaviours and health service use related to cancer incidence and diagnosis. The study population includes Inuit, Métis, First Nation and non-Aboriginal residents aged 21-65 who live in Nunavut, Northwest Territories, Labrador, Nunavik and Jamésie in northern Quebec, and the northern regions of Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Data are drawn from confidential versions of the 2000-2001 and 2004-2005 Canadian Community Health Surveys and the 2001 Aboriginal People's Survey produced by Statistics Canada. Multivariate Logistic regression analysis is applied to a set of health-related behaviours including cigarette smoking, binge drinking and obesity, and a set of basic health service use measures including consultation with a physician, consultation with a nurse, Pap smear testing and mammography. We found that significantly higher smoking and binge drinking rates and lower rates of female cancer screening among Inuit are found not to be accounted for by differences in observable demographic and socio-economic characteristics, location of residence or distance from a hospital. As such we conclude that health-related behaviours leading to increased cancer risk and to a lower utilization of diagnostic cancer screening appear to be due to unobserved factors specific to Inuit and their unique social-cultural context. Policy interventions to address these problems may need to be targeted specifically to Inuit Canadians and should not be considered in isolation of their broader health, economic and social environment.
本文旨在探讨人口统计学、社会经济和地理因素在多大程度上可以解释因纽特人与加拿大北部其他居民在与癌症发病率和诊断相关的健康行为和卫生服务使用方面的差异。研究对象包括居住在努纳武特、西北地区、拉布拉多、努纳维克和魁北克北部的贾米西以及萨斯喀彻温省和马尼托巴省北部地区的 21-65 岁的因纽特人、梅蒂斯人、第一民族和非原住民。数据来自加拿大统计局编制的 2000-2001 年和 2004-2005 年加拿大社区健康调查的机密版本,以及 2001 年的原住民调查。采用多元逻辑回归分析了一组健康相关行为,包括吸烟、狂饮和肥胖,以及一组基本卫生服务使用措施,包括看医生、看护士、巴氏涂片检查和乳房 X 光检查。我们发现,因纽特人的吸烟和狂饮率明显较高,女性癌症筛查率较低,但这些差异并不能用可观察到的人口统计学和社会经济特征、居住地或距医院的距离来解释。因此,我们的结论是,导致癌症风险增加和癌症诊断筛查利用率降低的健康相关行为似乎是由因纽特人特有的未被观察到的因素及其独特的社会文化背景所导致的。为了解决这些问题而采取的政策干预措施可能需要专门针对因纽特加拿大人和,而不应孤立于其更广泛的健康、经济和社会环境来考虑。