Greenwald H P, Borgatta E F, McCorkle R, Polissar N
Sacramento Center, University of Southern California 95814-2919, USA.
Milbank Q. 1996;74(2):215-38.
The fact that socially disadvantaged cancer patients face a greater risk of mortality than the advantaged is well recognized but poorly understood. Existing research and a newly completed 10-year survival study suggest that complex interrelations among biological factors, medical interventions, and specific dimensions of social differentiation determine survival differences. Patterns of interrelations among determinants of survival appear compatible with an "economic" model in some forms of cancer and a "cognitive-behavioral" model in others. Findings presented here suggest that improved access to health care will reduce mortality risk among the disadvantaged in at least some malignancies, but will not alone make their survival chances equal to those of the advantaged.
社会经济地位低下的癌症患者比条件优越的患者面临更高的死亡风险,这一事实已得到广泛认可,但人们对此了解甚少。现有研究以及一项新完成的为期10年的生存研究表明,生物因素、医疗干预措施和社会分化的特定维度之间的复杂相互关系决定了生存差异。在某些癌症类型中,生存决定因素之间的相互关系模式似乎与“经济”模型相符,而在其他癌症类型中则与“认知行为”模型相符。此处呈现的研究结果表明,改善医疗保健服务的可及性至少在某些恶性肿瘤中会降低弱势群体的死亡风险,但仅此一项并不能使他们的生存机会与条件优越者相等。