The authors examined disparities in survival among women aged 66 years or older in association with census-tract-level poverty rate, racial distribution, and individual-level factors, including patient-, treatment-, and tumor-related factors, utilization of medical care, and mammography use. They used linked data from the 1992–1999 Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) programs, 1991–1999 Medicare claims, and the 1990 US Census. A geographic information system and advanced statistics identified areas of increased or reduced breast cancer survival and possible reasons for geographic variation in survival in 2 of the 5 SEER areas studied. In the Detroit, Michigan, area, one geographic cluster of shorter-than-expected breast cance...
BACKGROUND: The relationship between socioeconomic status and cancer incidence in the United States ...
Background The Metropolitan Chicago Breast Cancer Taskforce was formed to address a growing black/wh...
abstract: Breast cancer affects hundreds of thousands of women a year in the United States, and kill...
BACKGROUND: Over the past twenty years, racial/ethnic disparities between late-stage diagnoses and m...
Breast cancer incidence and mortality rates have declined in the US for the past 10-15 years, but th...
Abstract Black women die of breast cancer at a much higher rate than white women. Recent studies hav...
BackgroundBreast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer and the second leading cause of cancer...
African American (AA) women have poorer breast cancer survival compared to Caucasian American (CA) w...
BACKGROUND Concern has been raised over the disproportionate cancer mortality among minority and low...
Few studies have examined the role of neighborhood socioeconomic condition in shaping breast cancer ...
BACKGROUND: Although rates of survival for women with breast cancer have improved, the survival disp...
Background: Previous studies have found that African-American women are more likely than white women...
Breast cancer is diagnosed at a younger age and a more advanced stage in African-American women than...
Background The literature suggests that the distribution of female breast cancer mortality demonstra...
Copyright © 2013 Tomi F. Akinyemiju et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Crea...
BACKGROUND: The relationship between socioeconomic status and cancer incidence in the United States ...
Background The Metropolitan Chicago Breast Cancer Taskforce was formed to address a growing black/wh...
abstract: Breast cancer affects hundreds of thousands of women a year in the United States, and kill...
BACKGROUND: Over the past twenty years, racial/ethnic disparities between late-stage diagnoses and m...
Breast cancer incidence and mortality rates have declined in the US for the past 10-15 years, but th...
Abstract Black women die of breast cancer at a much higher rate than white women. Recent studies hav...
BackgroundBreast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer and the second leading cause of cancer...
African American (AA) women have poorer breast cancer survival compared to Caucasian American (CA) w...
BACKGROUND Concern has been raised over the disproportionate cancer mortality among minority and low...
Few studies have examined the role of neighborhood socioeconomic condition in shaping breast cancer ...
BACKGROUND: Although rates of survival for women with breast cancer have improved, the survival disp...
Background: Previous studies have found that African-American women are more likely than white women...
Breast cancer is diagnosed at a younger age and a more advanced stage in African-American women than...
Background The literature suggests that the distribution of female breast cancer mortality demonstra...
Copyright © 2013 Tomi F. Akinyemiju et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Crea...
BACKGROUND: The relationship between socioeconomic status and cancer incidence in the United States ...
Background The Metropolitan Chicago Breast Cancer Taskforce was formed to address a growing black/wh...
abstract: Breast cancer affects hundreds of thousands of women a year in the United States, and kill...