A study from the American Cancer Society claims about the
relationship between lower health-related quality of life with social needs
factors of African-American cancer survivors.
Updated: Nov 29, 2020, 14:55 IST Asian News International
| Posted by Jahnavi GuptaMichigan [US]
A
study from the American
Cancer Society (ACS) claims about the relationship between
lower health-related quality of life (HRQOL) with social needs factors of
African-American cancer survivors including food and economic security,
housing, and neighbourhood conditions and access to transportation.
The
findings were published early online in CANCER, a
peer-reviewed journal of ACS.
Among
cancer survivors, HRQOL, or individuals’ perceived well-being regarding their
mental, physical, and social health status which tends to be significantly
lower among African Americans compared with other groups. Investigators looked
to see if social needs may play a role in this disparity.
HRQOL
was measured using a questionnaire called the Functional Assessment of Cancer
Therapy-General (FACT-G) in which the analysis included 1,754 participants in
the Detroit Research on Cancer Survivors (ROCS) cohort, a population-based
study of African American survivors of breast, colorectal, lung, and prostate
cancer. Social needs related to food insecurity, utility shut-offs, housing
instability, not getting health care due to cost or lack of transportation, and
negative perceptions of neighbourhood safety.
Researchers
found that more than one-third (36.3 percent) of survivors reported social
needs, including 17.1 percent who reported two or more. Prevalence of social
needs ranged from 8.9 percent for utility shut-offs to 14.8 percent for food
insecurity.
Social
needs that were linked with a low HRQOL score in the FACT-G questionnaire
included not getting care due to lack of transportation, housing instability,
food insecurity, feeling unsafe in the neighbourhood, utility shut-offs, and
not getting care due to cost.Lead author Theresa Hastert, Ph.D., of the
Karmanos Cancer Institute and Wayne State University School of Medicine in
Detroit, told, “A link between social needs and lower HRQOL among cancer
survivors is not surprising; however, the association had not been quantified
before”.
Additionally,
the study was conducted in a population of African American cancer survivors, a
population that is often underrepresented in cancer research. The prevalence of
social needs in this population may be higher than in cancer survivors more
broadly; however, the results likely apply to other populations as well.”My
hope is that these findings raise awareness among cancer care providers and
cancer researchers that many patients face substantial social and financial
difficulties and that these have real impacts on patients’ health-related
quality of life on top of cancer and cancer treatment,” Dr. Hastert added.
She
also explained that the cancer care and survivorship settings may represent an
opportunity to screen for social needs, to connect patients and survivors with
programs and services to address those needs and to implement innovative
interventions to reduce health disparities by addressing social needs among
Black cancer survivors.
“These
findings also highlight the need for and importance of having a social safety
net in advancing population health and health equity,” she said.
(This
story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the
text.)
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