Abstract
BackgroundA large volume of research has been published on both the socio economic and demographic determinants of cancer and on the health of immigrants and minority groups. Yet because of data limitations, little research examines differences in the occurrence of cancer incidence between immigrants and non-immigrants and among immigrants defined by region of birth and time in the host country. In particular it is not known whether a healthy immigrant effect is present for cancer and if so, whether this advantage is lost with additional years of residence in the host country.MethodsThis paper uses a large data file from Statistics Canada that links Census information on immigrant status, socioeconomic status including educational attainment, and other person-level information with administrative data on cancer and mortality over a continuous 13 year period of observation. It estimates discrete and continuous time duration models to identify differences in cancer diagnosis by immigrant subgroup after controlling for a variety of potential confounders. Differences in historical smoking behavior are not observable at the individual level in the dataset but are accounted for indirectly using various methods.ResultsResults in general confirm the existence of a healthy immigrant effect for cancer in that, overall, recent immigrants to Canada are significantly less likely than otherwise comparable non-immigrant Canadians to be diagnosed with any cancer and the most common forms of cancer by site. As well, this gap appears to decline with additional years in Canada for immigrant men and women, eventually converging to Canadian-born levels. Differentiating among immigrant subgroups by period of arrival and country of birth reveals significant variation across immigrant subgroups, with immigrant men and women from developing countries typically having a lower likelihood of being diagnosed with cancer than immigrants from the US, UK and continental Europe. As well, controlling for immigrant heterogeneity this way weakens the conclusion that the gap narrows with years in Canada. Immigrant men overall continue to exhibit convergence to Canadian-born levels for diagnosis of any cancer and for prostate cancer, while immigrant women exhibit narrowing over time only for breast cancer. Although smoking behavior is not directly observed, controlling for subgroup-specific lifetime smoking behavior using survey data has only a relatively minor effect on the estimated differences.ConclusionsThe specificity of the results by cancer type, gender, immigrant status and ethnicity provides useful guidance for future research by helping to narrow the possible channels through which social and economic characteristics may be affecting cancer incidence.
Highlights
A large volume of research has been published on both the socio economic and demographic determinants of cancer and on the health of immigrants and minority groups
Socioeconomic status may reflect a range of possible cancer determinants that are often not observed in administrative data sources, including health behaviors such as smoking, diet and activity, timely use of preventative health services, cancer screening, delayed childbirth, and exposure to carcinogens through occupational exposures (Link and Phelan [22]; Aronson et al [3], [8] Lightfoot and Berriault [21])
We investigate how cancer incidence varies by country of birth, year of arrival, and time spent in Canada
Summary
A large volume of research has been published on both the socio economic and demographic determinants of cancer and on the health of immigrants and minority groups. Depending on the cancer type, only 2–10% of cancers have been estimated to be the result of a mutation in, or the operation of, a particular gene (Lee Davis, Donovan, et al [19]) This suggests that the overwhelming majority of cancer-causing factors are linked to individual behaviour, environmental context, or interactions between genes and these other contextual factors. Identifying and evaluating systematic differences in cancer incidence by socioeconomic status or geographic region of residence can advance our understanding of cancer and so help public health agencies to design policies for those at greater risk of the disease. Socioeconomic factors such as education and income have long been important correlates of cancer incidence and survival. Demographic and socioeconomic inequalities in cancer incidence persist even with improved knowledge of risk factors and improvements in early detection and treatment, (Clegg et al [7])
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