Community-based breast cancer prevention efforts often focus on women who live in the same neighborhoods, as they tend to have similar demographic characteristics, health behaviors, and environmental exposures; yet little research describes methods of selecting neighborhoods of focus for community-based cancer prevention interventions. Studies frequently use demographics from census data, or single breast cancer outcomes (e.g., mortality, morbidity) in order to choose neighborhoods of focus for breast cancer interventions, which may not be optimal. This study presents a novel method for measuring the burden of breast cancer among neighborhoods that could be used for selecting neighborhoods of focus. In this study, we 1) calculate a metric c...
Although patterns of African American and white women breast cancer incidence and mortality in St. L...
BACKGROUND A 2007 national report identified North Carolina's Edgecombe County as having among the h...
IntroductionIdentifying communities with lower rates of mammography screening is a critical step to ...
Few studies have examined the role of neighborhood socioeconomic condition in shaping breast cancer ...
Introduction: Though cancer research has traditionally centered on individual-level exposures, there...
Background:This study uses a novel geographic approach to summarize the distribution of breast cance...
BackgroundThis study uses a novel geographic approach to summarize the distribution of breast cancer...
Background: Neighborhood socioeconomic status (nSES) has been found to be associated with breast can...
Breast cancer incidence and mortality rates have declined in the US for the past 10-15 years, but th...
Background: As social and built environment factors have been shown to be associated with physical a...
A discrepancy exists between mortality and incidence rates between African-American and European-Ame...
Objective: Assess the distribution and incidence of female breast cancer in the United States in dif...
Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) is an aggressive, heterogeneous subtype of breast cancer, which...
Although patterns of African American and white women breast cancer incidence and mortality in St. L...
Locating geographic hot spots of cancer may lead to new causal hypotheses and ultimately to new know...
Although patterns of African American and white women breast cancer incidence and mortality in St. L...
BACKGROUND A 2007 national report identified North Carolina's Edgecombe County as having among the h...
IntroductionIdentifying communities with lower rates of mammography screening is a critical step to ...
Few studies have examined the role of neighborhood socioeconomic condition in shaping breast cancer ...
Introduction: Though cancer research has traditionally centered on individual-level exposures, there...
Background:This study uses a novel geographic approach to summarize the distribution of breast cance...
BackgroundThis study uses a novel geographic approach to summarize the distribution of breast cancer...
Background: Neighborhood socioeconomic status (nSES) has been found to be associated with breast can...
Breast cancer incidence and mortality rates have declined in the US for the past 10-15 years, but th...
Background: As social and built environment factors have been shown to be associated with physical a...
A discrepancy exists between mortality and incidence rates between African-American and European-Ame...
Objective: Assess the distribution and incidence of female breast cancer in the United States in dif...
Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) is an aggressive, heterogeneous subtype of breast cancer, which...
Although patterns of African American and white women breast cancer incidence and mortality in St. L...
Locating geographic hot spots of cancer may lead to new causal hypotheses and ultimately to new know...
Although patterns of African American and white women breast cancer incidence and mortality in St. L...
BACKGROUND A 2007 national report identified North Carolina's Edgecombe County as having among the h...
IntroductionIdentifying communities with lower rates of mammography screening is a critical step to ...