Abstract
BackgroundGeographic patterns of cancer death rates in the U.S. have customarily been presented by county or aggregated into state economic or health service areas. Herein, we present the geographic patterns of cancer death rates in the U.S. by congressional district. Many congressional districts do not follow state or county boundaries. However, counties are the smallest geographical units for which death rates are available. Thus, a method based on the hierarchical relationship of census geographic units was developed to estimate age-adjusted death rates for congressional districts using data obtained at county level. These rates may be useful in communicating to legislators and policy makers about the cancer burden and potential impact of cancer control in their jurisdictions.ResultsMortality data were obtained from the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) for 1990–2001 for 50 states, the District of Columbia, and all counties. We computed annual average age-adjusted death rates for all cancer sites combined, the four major cancers (lung and bronchus, prostate, female breast, and colorectal cancer) and cervical cancer. Cancer death rates varied widely across congressional districts for all cancer sites combined, for the four major cancers, and for cervical cancer. When examined at the national level, broad patterns of mortality by sex, race and region were generally similar with those previously observed based on county and state economic area.ConclusionWe developed a method to generate cancer death rates by congressional district using county-level mortality data. Characterizing the cancer burden by congressional district may be useful in promoting cancer control and prevention programs, and persuading legislators to enact new cancer control programs and/or strengthening existing ones. The method can be applied to state legislative districts and other analyses that involve data aggregation from different geographic units.
Highlights
Geographic patterns of cancer death rates in the U.S have customarily been presented by county or aggregated into state economic or health service areas
Cancer death rates presented by geographic boundaries such as state and county, state economic areas, and health service areas have been useful in monitoring temporal trends in allocating public health resources [1,2], and in some instances, in generating etiological hypotheses
The cancer mortality patterns by congressional district are generally similar to the patterns seen using other geographic boundaries
Summary
Geographic patterns of cancer death rates in the U.S have customarily been presented by county or aggregated into state economic or health service areas. A method based on the hierarchical relationship of census geographic units was developed to estimate age-adjusted death rates for congressional districts using data obtained at county level. These rates may be useful in communicating to legislators and policy makers about the cancer burden and potential impact of cancer control in their jurisdictions. International Journal of Health Geographics 2006, 5:28 http://www.ij-healthgeographics.com/content/5/1/28 These rates are less useful for communicating to legislators and policy makers whose jurisdictions are not defined by state or county boundaries. Declines in smoking prevalence among men as a result of public health efforts have had a major influence on the declines in cancer mortality in the last decade
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