Division of Public Health Sciences, Department of Social Sciences and Health Policy, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Medical Center Boulevard, Winston-Salem, NC 27157, USA.
Cancer Causes Control. 2013 Aug;24(8):1481-90. doi: 10.1007/s10552-013-0225-x. Epub 2013 May 16.
Rural US adults have increased risk of poor outcomes after cancer, including increased cancer mortality. Rural-urban differences in health behaviors have been identified in the general population and may contribute to cancer health disparities, but have not yet been examined among US survivors. We examined rural-urban differences in health behaviors among cancer survivors and associations with self-reported health and health-related unemployment.
We identified rural (n = 1,642) and urban (n = 6,162) survivors from the cross-sectional National Health Interview Survey (2006-2010) and calculated the prevalence of smoking, physical activity, overweight/obesity, and alcohol consumption. Multivariable models were used to examine the associations of fair/poor health and health-related unemployment with health behaviors and rural-urban residence.
The prevalence of fair/poor health (rural 36.7 %, urban 26.6 %), health-related unemployment (rural 18.5 %, urban 10.6 %), smoking (rural 25.3 %, urban 15.8 %), and physical inactivity (rural 50.7 %, urban 38.7 %) was significantly higher in rural survivors (all p < .05); alcohol consumption was lower (rural 46.3 %, urban 58.6 %), and there were no significant differences in overweight/obesity (rural 65.4 %, urban 62.6 %). All health behaviors were significantly associated with fair/poor health and health-related unemployment in both univariate and multivariable models. After adjustment for behaviors, rural survivors remained more likely than urban survivors to report fair/poor health (OR = 1.21, 95 % CI 1.03-1.43) and health-related unemployment (OR = 1.49, 95 % CI 1.18-1.88).
Rural survivors may need tailored, accessible health promotion interventions to address health-compromising behaviors and improve outcomes after cancer.
美国农村成年人在癌症后预后较差的风险增加,包括癌症死亡率增加。在普通人群中已经发现了城乡之间健康行为的差异,这些差异可能导致癌症健康差距,但尚未在美国幸存者中进行研究。我们研究了癌症幸存者的城乡健康行为差异,以及这些差异与自我报告的健康和与健康相关的失业之间的关系。
我们从横断面全国健康访谈调查(2006-2010 年)中确定了农村(n=1642)和城市(n=6162)幸存者,并计算了吸烟、身体活动、超重/肥胖和饮酒的患病率。多变量模型用于检验健康状况不佳和与健康相关的失业与健康行为和城乡居住的关系。
农村幸存者的健康状况不佳(农村 36.7%,城市 26.6%)、与健康相关的失业(农村 18.5%,城市 10.6%)、吸烟(农村 25.3%,城市 15.8%)和缺乏身体活动(农村 50.7%,城市 38.7%)的患病率显著高于城市幸存者(均 P<0.05);饮酒量较低(农村 46.3%,城市 58.6%),超重/肥胖无显著差异(农村 65.4%,城市 62.6%)。在单变量和多变量模型中,所有健康行为均与健康状况不佳和与健康相关的失业显著相关。在调整行为后,农村幸存者仍比城市幸存者更有可能报告健康状况不佳(OR=1.21,95%CI 1.03-1.43)和与健康相关的失业(OR=1.49,95%CI 1.18-1.88)。
农村幸存者可能需要量身定制的、可及的健康促进干预措施,以解决影响健康的行为,并改善癌症后的结果。