Vijayasiri Ganga, Molina Yamile, Chukwudozie Ifeanyi Beverly, Tejeda Silvia, Pauls Heather A, Rauscher Garth H, Campbell Richard T, Warnecke Richard B
Institute for Health Research and Policy, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1747 West Roosevelt Rd, Chicago, IL, 60608.
School of Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1603 West Taylor Street, Chicago, IL, 60612.
J Health Dispar Res Pract. 2018 Fall;11(3).
This study attempts to clarify the associations between macro-social and social network factors and the continuing racial disparities in breast cancer survival. The study improves on prior methodologies by using a neighborhood disadvantage measure that assesses both economic and social disadvantage and an ego-network measurement tool that assesses key social network characteristics. Our population-based sample included 786 breast cancer patients (nHWhite=388; nHBlack=398) diagnosed during 2005-2008 in Chicago, IL. The data included census-derived macro-social context, self-reported social network, self-reported demographic and medically abstracted health measures. Mortality data from the National Death Index (NDI) were used to determine 5-year survival. Based on our findings, neighborhood concentrated disadvantage was negatively associated with survival among nHBlack and nHWhite breast cancer patients. In unadjusted models, social network size, network density, practical support, and financial support were positively associated with 5-year survival. However, in adjusted models only practical support was associated with 5-year survival. Our findings suggested that the association between network size and breast cancer survival is sensitive to scaling of the network measure, which helps to explain inconsistencies in past findings. Social networks of nHWhites and nHBlacks differed in size, social support dimensions, network density, and geographic proximity. Among social factors, residence in disadvantaged neighborhoods and unmet practical support explained some of the racial disparity in survival. Differences in late stage diagnosis and comorbidities between nHWhites and nHBlacks also explained some of the racial disparity in survival. Our findings highlight the relevance of social factors, both macro and inter-personal in the racial disparity in breast cancer survival. Findings suggest that reduced survival of nHBlack women is in part due to low social network resources and residence in socially and economically deprived neighborhoods. To improve survival among breast cancer patients social policies need to continue improving health care access as well as racially patterned social and economic disadvantage.
本研究旨在阐明宏观社会和社会网络因素与乳腺癌生存方面持续存在的种族差异之间的关联。该研究改进了先前的方法,使用了一种评估经济和社会劣势的邻里劣势衡量指标以及一种评估关键社会网络特征的自我中心网络测量工具。我们基于人群的样本包括2005年至2008年期间在伊利诺伊州芝加哥市诊断出的786名乳腺癌患者(非西班牙裔白人 = 388名;非西班牙裔黑人 = 398名)。数据包括源自人口普查的宏观社会背景、自我报告的社会网络、自我报告的人口统计学信息以及医学提取的健康指标。来自国家死亡指数(NDI)的死亡率数据用于确定5年生存率。根据我们的研究结果,邻里集中劣势与非西班牙裔黑人和非西班牙裔白人乳腺癌患者的生存率呈负相关。在未调整的模型中,社会网络规模、网络密度、实际支持和经济支持与5年生存率呈正相关。然而,在调整后的模型中,只有实际支持与5年生存率相关。我们的研究结果表明,网络规模与乳腺癌生存之间的关联对网络测量的缩放很敏感,这有助于解释过去研究结果中的不一致之处。非西班牙裔白人和非西班牙裔黑人的社会网络在规模、社会支持维度、网络密度和地理 proximity方面存在差异。在社会因素中,居住在弱势社区和未得到满足的实际支持解释了生存方面的一些种族差异。非西班牙裔白人和非西班牙裔黑人在晚期诊断和合并症方面的差异也解释了生存方面的一些种族差异。我们的研究结果强调了宏观和人际社会因素在乳腺癌生存种族差异中的相关性。研究结果表明,非西班牙裔黑人女性生存率降低部分归因于社会网络资源匮乏以及居住在社会和经济贫困的社区。为了提高乳腺癌患者的生存率,社会政策需要继续改善医疗保健可及性以及消除种族模式化的社会和经济劣势。