Cancer of the colon: socioeconomic variables in a community
- PMID: 1155441
- DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a112139
Cancer of the colon: socioeconomic variables in a community
Abstract
Carcinoma of the colon was studied in Omaha-Douglas County, Nebraska (population 345,000). A total of 154 cases of colon cancer were diagnosed in 1964 (44.7/100,000). The frequency distribution of these patients in specific census tracts of this community was determined. Statistical analysis of the data showed a greater frequency of colon cancer in patients living in census tracts with higher average income. Colon cancer appears to be nonrandomly distributed with respect to the income and socioeconomic status of its victims, suggesting that hypotheses consistent with environmental variables--particularly those characterizing extremely high versus extremely low socioeconomic groups, including occupation, diet and other life patterns--should be pursued. All of these data have implications for cancer epidemiology, cancer control, and carcinogenesis.
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