Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5114809 | Health & Place | 2017 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Among 10,068 incident cases of invasive melanoma, we examined the effects of patient characteristics and access-to-care on the risk of advanced melanoma. Access-to-care was defined in terms of census tract-level sociodemographics, health insurance, cost of dermatological services and appointment wait-times, clinic density and travel distance. Public health insurance and education level were the strongest predictors of advanced melanomas but were modified by race/ethnicity and poverty: Hispanic whites and high-poverty neighborhoods were worse off than non-Hispanic whites and low-poverty neighborhoods. Targeting high-risk, underserved Hispanics and high-poverty neighborhoods (easily identified from existing data) for early melanoma detection may be a cost-efficient strategy to reduce melanoma mortality.
Keywords
LACHealth care accessibilityUSPSTFNHWPPOU.S.HMOCSPSESUnited StatesHigh-risk populationMelanomaPreferred Provider Organizationhealth maintenance organizationNon-Hispanic whiteconfidence intervalLos Angeles CountyCensus tractodds ratioUnited States Preventive Services Task Forcesocioeconomic statusminority groups
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Authors
Loraine A. Escobedo, Ashley Crew, Ariana Eginli, David Peng, Michael R. Cousineau, Myles Cockburn,