html5-img
1 / 19

Inka Milewski Conservation Council of New Brunswick

Identifying at-risk communities for action on cancer prevention: a case study in New Brunswick (Canada) communities. Inka Milewski Conservation Council of New Brunswick CRDCN 2012 National Conference: Evidence-based Policy Formation and Evaluation Fredericton, New Brunswick

kamea
Download Presentation

Inka Milewski Conservation Council of New Brunswick

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Identifying at-risk communities for action on cancer prevention: a case study in New Brunswick (Canada) communities InkaMilewski Conservation Council of New Brunswick CRDCN 2012 National Conference: Evidence-based Policy Formation and Evaluation Fredericton, New Brunswick October 23, 2012

  2. What do we know about cancer rates in Canadian communities? • Guernsey et al 2000 • Sydney, Nova Scotia • higher rates of breast and cervical cancer than provincial rates • higher rate of colon, rectum and prostate cancer among men than provincial rates • Holowaty et al. 2010 - Ontario public health unit (Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph) - highest rate of lung cancer in urban core area of Guelph - highest rate of prostate cancer in the Orangeville area • Colquhoun et al. 2010 • First Nations community of Fort Chipewyan, Alberta • higher rates of cervical and biliary tract, other and unspecified cancers than all First Nations in Alberta and Alberta general population

  3. Study Design • 9 rural and 5 urban communities • 6 primary cancers for males (prostate, lung, colorectal, bladder, NHL, kidney) • 4 primary cancers for females (breast, lung, colorectal, NHL) • age-unadjusted cancer incidence rates per 100,000 population (1989-2005) with 95%Cl • Community SES measures (education, poverty rate, income, unemployment)

  4. Statistical Analysis • Multivariate ordination (MDS) to plot similarities in cancer incidence among communities • Hierarchical cluster analysis to identify possible clusters and permutation testing (SIMPROF) to test the significance of clusters • Permutation testing (RELATE) to test the correlation of SES pattern and cancer incidence

  5. 2D Stress: 0.05 2D Stress: 0.04 Upper Miramichi Fredericton Harvey Edmundston Minto Gagetown Saint John Bathurst Drummond- Denmark Moncton Gagetown Miramichi Dalhousie Dalhousie Bathurst Caraquet Edmundston Moncton Harvey Miramichi Fredericton Caraquet Saint John Drummond- Denmark Upper Miramichi Belledune Belledune Minto Non-metric multidimensional scaling (MDS) plot of similarities in male and female age unadjusted cancer incidence rates among 5 urban (■) and 9 rural (▼) communities Females Males p < 0.001 p < 0.001

  6. MDS plot of similarities in socioeconomic status (SES) among among 5 urban (■) and 9 rural (▼) communities New Brunswick communities

  7. Correlation between cancer rates and SES factors ρ = - 0.071 males ρ = 0.041 females

  8. Age-standardized vs age-unadjusted Cancer Rates Milewski and Liu 2009

  9. Milewski and Liu 2009

  10. Milewski and Liu 2009

  11. Conclusions • Rates of cancer differed significantly among New Brunswick communities and were unrelated to SES • Reporting data at the right spatial scale is key to avoiding policy mismatches • Identifying at-risk communities can result in the development of more appropriate risk reduction and prevention programs

  12. Acknowledgments • Lilly Liu, CCNB research assistant • EJLB Foundation • Salamander Foundation • New Brunswick Cancer Network • Statistics Canada

More Related