Berg J W, Ross R, Latourette H B
Cancer. 1977 Feb;39(2):467-77. doi: 10.1002/1097-0142(197702)39:2<467::aid-cncr2820390215>3.0.co;2-b.
The relation of economic status to survival was studied for 39 kinds of cancer representing all types for which 60 or more indigent patients were seen in University of Iowa Hospital for primary care during the years 1940-1969. For every type the indigent patients had poorer survival than non-indigent patients. Quality of care would be eliminated as a major variable since a second group of "ward" patients of higher economic status was available for comparison and the differences were substantially greater between the two groups of teaching patients than between the "clinic pay" and "private" patients. Age differences and differences in stage of disease accounted for less than half of the survival deficits in the indigents. The two important problems were high mortality from causes other than cancer and excess cancer mortality not accounted for by stage differences, particularly among patients who should have had 5-year survival rates between 40 and 70%. In these patients cancer recurred more often and earlier among the indigent. We postulate host differences associated with poverty that could also account for much of the observed Black-White differences as well as some international differences in cancer survival rates.
对1940年至1969年间在爱荷华大学医院接受初级治疗的60名或更多贫困患者所患的39种各类癌症的经济状况与生存率之间的关系进行了研究。对于每种癌症类型,贫困患者的生存率均低于非贫困患者。由于有第二组经济状况较高的“病房”患者可供比较,且两组教学患者之间的差异远大于“诊所付费”患者和“私人”患者之间的差异,因此医疗质量可被排除为主要变量。年龄差异和疾病阶段差异占贫困患者生存缺陷的比例不到一半。两个重要问题是癌症以外原因导致的高死亡率以及阶段差异无法解释的额外癌症死亡率,特别是在本应有40%至70%的5年生存率的患者中。在这些患者中,贫困患者的癌症复发更频繁且更早。我们推测与贫困相关的宿主差异也可能是观察到的黑人和白人之间差异以及癌症生存率的一些国际差异的主要原因。