Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York, USA.
Department of Healthcare Policy and Research, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York, USA.
Psychooncology. 2022 Nov;31(11):1922-1932. doi: 10.1002/pon.6006. Epub 2022 Aug 19.
In the United States, medically underserved populations, such as ethnoracially underrepresented groups, the limited English proficient (LEP), and the unemployed, may be vulnerable to poor functioning in cancer survivorship. The present study examined whether race/ethnicity, LEP status, and unemployment status were associated with poor health-related quality of life (HRQL) in four domains (physical, social, emotional, and functional well-being (FWB)) in a diverse, low socioeconomic status (SES) sample of cancer patients.
The sample included 1592 ethnoracially diverse, low SES, primarily foreign-born adult oncology patients participating in an enhanced patient navigation program in 11 New York City hospital-based cancer clinics. This secondary cross-sectional analysis of program intake data examined bivariate associations between sociodemographic and clinical factors and poor HRQL (Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General scores ≤70). Factors found to be related to poor HRQL (at p < 0.05) were entered into logistic regressions with overall HRQL and the four HRQL subscales as outcomes. The Benjamini-Hochberg Procedure controlled for potentially inflated type-I error rate due to multiple comparisons.
All three predictor variables (race/ethnicity, LEP status, and unemployment status) were significantly associated with increased odds of reporting poor FWB. Specifically, non-Hispanic White and Hispanic cancer patients had 2.7 and 1.5 times the odds of reporting poor FWB than non-Hispanic Black patients. The unemployed had 1.4 times the odds of reporting poor FWB than their employed or retired counterparts. Limited EP patients had 1.4 times the odds of reporting poor FWB than EP participants. Non-Hispanic Black patients evidenced significantly lower odds of reporting poor HRQL across all subscale domains compared with other ethnoracial groups.
LEP and unemployed individuals were more likely to report poor FWB, which may indicate that the most marginalized cancer patients face significant barriers to adequate functioning. Interventions that promote functional abilities (i.e., activities of daily living, self-care, and work retention) and policies and programs that reduce systemic inequality and address social determinants of health may aid in improving HRQL for these underserved groups in survivorship. Non-Hispanic Black cancer patients were less likely than other groups to report poor physical, social, emotional, and FWB. Identifying protective factors in this group may aid in efforts to improve HRQL for all patients.
在美国,医疗服务不足的人群,如民族和种族代表性不足的群体、英语水平有限的人群和失业人群,可能在癌症生存者的功能中表现不佳。本研究考察了在一个多样化的、低社会经济地位(SES)的癌症患者样本中,种族/民族、英语水平有限和失业状况是否与四个领域(身体、社会、情感和功能健康(FWB))的健康相关生活质量(HRQL)较差有关。
该样本包括 1592 名来自 11 家纽约市医院癌症诊所的民族和种族多样化、低 SES、主要为外国出生的成年肿瘤患者,他们参加了一个增强型患者导航项目。对该项目入组数据的二次横断面分析考察了社会人口统计学和临床因素与较差 HRQL(癌症治疗功能评估-一般评分≤70)之间的单变量关联。在多变量逻辑回归中,将与总体 HRQL 和四个 HRQL 子量表相关的因素(p<0.05)作为结果进行输入。本研究采用 Benjamini-Hochberg 程序控制了由于多次比较而导致的潜在膨胀的 I 型错误率。
所有三个预测变量(种族/民族、英语水平有限和失业状况)均与报告 FWB 较差的几率增加显著相关。具体而言,非西班牙裔白人和西班牙裔癌症患者报告 FWB 较差的几率是非西班牙裔黑人患者的 2.7 倍和 1.5 倍。失业者报告 FWB 较差的几率是其就业或退休人员的 1.4 倍。英语水平有限的患者报告 FWB 较差的几率是英语水平良好的参与者的 1.4 倍。非西班牙裔黑人患者在所有子量表领域报告较差 HRQL 的几率明显低于其他民族和种族群体。
英语水平有限和失业的个体更有可能报告 FWB 较差,这可能表明最边缘化的癌症患者在功能上存在显著障碍。促进功能能力(即日常生活活动、自我护理和工作保留)的干预措施以及减少系统性不平等和解决健康社会决定因素的政策和方案,可能有助于改善生存者中这些服务不足群体的 HRQL。非西班牙裔黑人癌症患者报告身体、社会、情感和 FWB 较差的几率低于其他群体。确定该群体的保护因素可能有助于改善所有患者的 HRQL。