Authors
Sarah Hill, Diana Sarfati, Tony Blakely, Bridget Robson, Gordon Purdie, Jarvis Chen, Elizabeth Dennett, Donna Cormack, Ruth Cunningham, Kevin Dew, Tim McCreanor, Ichiro Kawachi
Publication date
2010/2/1
Journal
Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health
Volume
64
Issue
2
Pages
117-123
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
Description
Background
Ethnic disparities in cancer survival have been documented in many populations and cancer types. The causes of these inequalities are not well understood but may include disease and patient characteristics, treatment differences and health service factors. Survival was compared in a cohort of Maori (Indigenous) and non-Maori New Zealanders with colon cancer, and the contribution of demographics, disease characteristics, patient comorbidity, treatment and healthcare factors to survival disparities was assessed.
Methods
Maori patients diagnosed as having colon cancer between 1996 and 2003 were identified from the New Zealand Cancer Registry and compared with a randomly selected sample of non-Maori patients. Clinical and outcome data were obtained from medical records, pathology reports and the national mortality database. Cancer-specific survival was examined using Kaplan–Meier …
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