Title of article :
Using north carolina medicare data to assess excess prostate cancer mortality among african americans
Author/Authors :
AP Schenck، نويسنده , , S Stroud، نويسنده , , P Godley، نويسنده , , M Manning، نويسنده , , V Schoenbach، نويسنده , , M Symon، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages :
2
From page :
469
To page :
470
Abstract :
PURPOSE: To investigate the basis for the higher prostate cancer mortality rate for African American (AA) men, which is twice the rate for White men. METHODS: 221 AA and 979 White men with a primary diagnosis code of prostate cancer (“patients”) in the North Carolina Medicare Hospitalization claims from 1997 were compared with 1,326 AA and 5,874 White men of the same age with no cancer hospitalizations (“beneficiaries”) selected from the NC Medicare Enrollment files. Mortality rates were calculated as the cumulative percent of deaths using the hospital discharge date as day 1. AA and White age distributions were similar. RESULTS: Cumulative mortality percentages at 6, 12, and 18 months were, respectively, 4.5, 7.7, 10.9 for AA patients; 2.8, 6.5, 9.2 for White patients; 2.3, 3.8, 7.4 for AA beneficiaries; and 1.8, 3.1, 6.1 for White beneficiaries. CONCLUSIONS: AA prostate cancer patients had higher overall mortality than did White prostate cancer patients during the first year, but by 12-months the White-Black survival advantage for prostate cancer patients was similar in magnitude to the White-Black survival advantage among the non-cancer Medicare beneficiaries. AAsʹ higher prostate cancer mortality may derive from higher short-term case fatality rates, which may reflect differences in treatment and access to quality medical care, co-morbidities, and tumor characteristics such as stage and grade at diagnosis, and in part from the survival disadvantage for AA in the general population.
Journal title :
Annals of Epidemiology
Serial Year :
2000
Journal title :
Annals of Epidemiology
Record number :
461773
Link To Document :
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