Reducing social inequalities in cancer: evidence and priorities for research
- PMID: 33443989
- Bookshelf ID: NBK566181
Reducing social inequalities in cancer: evidence and priorities for research
Excerpt
This volume summarizes the current scientific evidence and identifies research priorities needed to decrease social inequalities in cancer. The publication, based on the expert knowledge of more than 70 international scientists from multiple disciplines, undertakes a populations-within-populations approach, highlighting the large variations in cancer incidence, survival, and mortality that exist between countries and, within countries, between social groups. Several factors may lead individuals with low social status to adopt unhealthy behaviors, to be exposed to a wider range and a higher intensity of cancer risk factors, and to have reduced access to health-care services, compared with their fellow citizens. A special focus is given to how the phenomenon of inequalities in cancer evolves and is reshaped over time, driven by economic, social, political, legislative, and technological forces; it affects everyone, but the most disadvantaged individuals are particularly hard hit. This IARC Scientific Publication was developed to serve as a reference for policy-makers and public health officials, linking to specific examples of interventions that may reduce future inequalities in cancer.
© International Agency for Research on Cancer, 2019. For more information contact publications@iarc.fr.
Sections
- Library Cataloguing Information
- IARC Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
- Foreword
- Preface
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1. Social inequalities and cancer: the imperative to act
- Chapter 2. Social inequalities, global public health, and cancer
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Part 1. Evidence of social inequalities in cancer
- Introduction to Part 1
- Chapter 3. Why social inequalities matter in the cancer continuum
- Focus 1. Changing social inequalities in cancer mortality: the value of linking census and health data
- Chapter 4. Measuring socioeconomic status and inequalities
- Focus 2. Incorporating indicators of socioeconomic status or ethnicity in cancer registries
- Chapter 5. Social inequalities in cancer between countries
- Focus 3. Cancer survival in countries in transition, with a focus on selected Asian countries
- Focus 4. Social inequality in cancer: perspectives from Africa
- Chapter 6. Social inequalities in cancer within countries
- Focus 5. Social inequalities and cancer in Indigenous populations
- Focus 6. Inequality and cancer: the conflict ecosystem and refugees
- Focus 7. Social inequalities in cancer burden between Black and White populations in the USA
- Chapter 7. Social inequalities in cancer risk factors and health-care access
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Part 2. Mechanisms and context underlying social inequalities in cancer
- Introduction to Part 2
- Chapter 8. Theoretical frameworks and cancer inequities
- Chapter 9. Recent trends in income inequality
- Chapter 10. The role of health systems in addressing inequalities in access to cancer control
- Chapter 11. The economics and control of tobacco, alcohol, food products, and sugar-sweetened beverages
- Example 1. Tobacco-related cancers and taxation of tobacco in low- and middle-income countries
- Chapter 12. The role of law in reducing global cancer inequalities
- Chapter 13. Life-course approach: from socioeconomic determinants to biological embodiment
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Part 3. Tackling social inequalities in cancer
- Introduction to Part 3
- Chapter 14. Assessing the impact of a public health intervention to reduce social inequalities in cancer
- Chapter 15. Research priorities for social inequalities in cancer in sub-Saharan Africa
- Focus 8. Social inequalities in cancer in Asia
- Chapter 16. Low-cost approaches to reducing social inequalities in cancer in low- and middle-income countries and disadvantaged populations
- Example 2. HPV vaccination and screening for cervical cancer
- Focus 9. Social inequalities in cancer in Latin America
- Chapter 17. Sharing lessons learned from the AIDS response to address social inequalities in cancer
- Chapter 18. Technology and cancer systems: creating better policy to enhance equality
- Chapter 19. The inverse care law: overutilization of health services and overdiagnosis
- Conclusions.
- Disclosures of interests
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