Abstract

There is a growing literature on the association between neighborhood contexts and cancer survivorship. To understand the current trends and the gaps in the literature, we aimed to answer the following questions: To what degree, and how, has cancer survivorship research accounted for neighborhood-level effects? What neighborhood metrics have been used to operationalize neighborhood factors? To what degree do the neighborhood level metrics considered in cancer research reflect neighborhood development as identified in the Leadership for Energy and Environmental Design for Neighborhood Development (LEED-ND) guidelines? We first conducted a review guided by PRISMA extension for scoping review of the extant literature on neighborhood effects and cancer survivorship outcomes from January 2000 to January 2021. Second, we categorized the studied neighborhood metrics under six main themes. Third, we assessed the findings based on the LEED-ND guidelines to identify the most relevant neighborhood metrics in association with areas of focus in cancer survivorship care and research. The search results were scoped to 291 relevant peer-reviewed journal articles. Results show that survivorship disparities, primary care, and weight management are the main themes in the literature. Additionally, most articles rely on neighborhood SES as the primary (or only) examined neighborhood level metric. We argue that the expansion of interdisciplinary research to include neighborhood metrics endorsed by current paradigms in salutogenic urban design can enhance the understanding of the role of socioecological context in survivorship care and outcomes.

Highlights

  • Cancer is the second leading cause of death globally, accounting for 9.6 million deaths and 18.1 million new cases in 2018 [1]

  • We identified 15 themes that were studied in relation to neighborhood factors: survival disparities, primary care, body size and weight management, quality of life, environmental exposure, social support, physical functioning, chronic medical conditions, medical financial hardship, self-rated health, adherence in dietary interventions, alcohol consumption, relocation and neighborhood tenure, stress management, and illness intrusiveness

  • Our findings indicate that nSES, physical activity and residential segregation are the most-studied neighborhood factors across these themes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cancer is the second leading cause of death globally, accounting for 9.6 million deaths and 18.1 million new cases in 2018 [1]. With advancements in treatment and early detection, the number of cancer survivors is increasing [2]. In 2018 the number of cancer survivors diagnosed within the past 5 years was estimated at around 43.8 million globally [3]. The number of cancer survivors in the U.S is rapidly growing with a current estimate of. 16.9 million cancer survivors that is expected to rise to 22.1 million by 2030 [4]. As the number of cancer survivors increases, it poses challenges to health care systems [3]. Reducing disparities across the survivorship continuum is a priority for health promotion and clinical care

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call