Sex, Race and Geographic Disparities in Early Age at Onset Hematologic Malignancies
Sklarz T, DuBois T, Lynch S. Sex, Race and Geographic Disparities in Early Age at Onset Hematologic Malignancies. Blood 2024, 144: 5117. DOI: 10.1182/blood-2024-207878.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchNon-Hispanic blacksIncidence rate ratiosNon-Hispanic whitesNon-Hispanic Black individualsLate-onset diseaseNational Program of Cancer RegistriesNon-Hispanic Asian/Pacific IslanderPrevention effortsRelative riskNon-Hispanic white populationPrecision public healthPublic health approachSurveillance dataOnset diseaseEarly-onset cancersHigh-burden statesPopulation-level surveillance dataNon-Hodgkin's lymphomaHighest incidence rateHematologic malignanciesHigher relative riskScreening interventionsCancer RegistryRacial/ethnic subpopulationsNon-HispanicEffect of neighborhood and individual-level socioeconomic factors on breast cancer screening adherence in a multi-ethnic study
Kasper G, Momen M, Sorice K, Mayhand K, Handorf E, Gonzalez E, Devlin A, Brownstein K, Esnaola N, Fisher S, Lynch S. Effect of neighborhood and individual-level socioeconomic factors on breast cancer screening adherence in a multi-ethnic study. BMC Public Health 2024, 24: 63. PMID: 38166942, PMCID: PMC10763410, DOI: 10.1186/s12889-023-17252-9.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsLow breast cancerBreast cancerRace/ethnicityOdds ratioAnnual breast cancer screeningMultivariable mixed-effects logistic regression modelSocioeconomic statusBreast cancer mortalityIndividual-level socioeconomic factorsCross-sectional studyMixed effects logistic regression modelsMulti-Ethnic StudyBreast cancer screeningLogistic regression modelsMulti-ethnic populationResultsNineteen percentScreening interventionsCancer mortalityCancer screeningInsurance statusCancerSES indicatorsAdherenceConfidence intervalsSignificant predictors