Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of Pediatrics, Medical College of Wisconsin, 9200 W. Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53226, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2010 Nov;25(11):1164-71. doi: 10.1007/s11606-010-1457-z. Epub 2010 Jul 24.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer in the United States and a leading cause of cancer related mortality. Routine screening decreases incidence and mortality; however rates of screening remain low. Physician recommendation is a key determinant of screening rates; thus, physician availability may also influence CRC incidence and mortality.
Data on CRC incidence and stage at diagnosis was obtained for each county in Pennsylvania from the Pennsylvania cancer registry. Physician density (per 100,000 population) was calculated for each county using physician counts from the American Medical Association. Pearson correlation coefficients and linear regression models were used to examine the association between physician density and CRC incidence and outcomes.
Primary care physician density (Pearson's correlation coefficient: -0.25, p=0.05) and gastroenterologist density (correlation coefficient -0.25, p=0.04) inversely correlated with county-level incidence of late-stage CRC. However, this association was seen only in non-metropolitan counties or those with low population density. On linear regression, non-metropolitan counties which had a high density of gastroenterologists had an incidence of late-stage CRC that was lower by 4/100,000 (reduction of 14%). Low population density counties had lower incidence of late-stage CRC by 5/100,000 (reduction of 17%) when they had at least 3.3 gastroenterologists/100,000 population compared to counties with a lower gastroenterologist-per-population ratio. Gastroenterologist density did not correlate with reduced late-stage CRC incidence prior to institution of Medicare coverage for colonoscopy for routine CRC screening.
Higher gastroenterologist or PCP density is associated with 14-17% lower incidence of late-stage CRC in non-metropolitan counties or those with low population density. Efforts at increasing physician supply should target these underserved areas.
在美国,结直肠癌(CRC)是第三大常见癌症,也是癌症相关死亡的主要原因。常规筛查可降低发病率和死亡率;然而,筛查率仍然很低。医生的建议是筛查率的关键决定因素;因此,医生的可用性也可能影响 CRC 的发病率和死亡率。
从宾夕法尼亚癌症登记处获得宾夕法尼亚州每个县的 CRC 发病率和诊断时的分期数据。使用美国医学协会的医生人数计算每个县的医生密度(每 10 万人)。使用 Pearson 相关系数和线性回归模型来检查医生密度与 CRC 发病率和结果之间的关联。
初级保健医生密度(Pearson 相关系数:-0.25,p=0.05)和胃肠病学家密度(相关系数-0.25,p=0.04)与县一级晚期 CRC 的发病率呈负相关。然而,这种关联仅见于非大都市县或人口密度低的县。在线性回归中,胃肠病学家密度高的非大都市县的晚期 CRC 发病率降低了 4/100,000(降低了 14%)。当低人口密度县每 10 万人至少有 3.3 名胃肠病学家时,与胃肠病学家每人口比例较低的县相比,晚期 CRC 的发病率降低了 5/100,000(降低了 17%),因为他们获得了常规 CRC 筛查的医疗保险覆盖。在为常规 CRC 筛查引入 Medicare 覆盖之前,胃肠病学家密度与晚期 CRC 发病率降低无关。
在非大都市县或人口密度低的县,较高的胃肠病学家或初级保健医生密度与晚期 CRC 发病率降低 14-17%相关。增加医生供应的努力应针对这些服务不足的地区。