Cancer registration and healthcare access in West Bank, Palestine: A GIS analysis of childhood cancer, 1998-2007
Autor: | Ibrahim Ghannam, Abdel Razzaq Salhab, Jess Ghannam, Mohammad K. Hararah, Ziad Abdeen, M. Rami Bailony |
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Rok vydání: | 2010 |
Předmět: |
Cancer Research
Pathology medicine.medical_specialty Time Factors Referral Population Disease Disease cluster Health Services Accessibility Middle East Neoplasms Environmental health Health care medicine Humans Registries Child education Quality Indicators Health Care education.field_of_study business.industry Incidence (epidemiology) Cancer Prognosis medicine.disease Arabs Cancer registry Oncology Data Interpretation Statistical Geographic Information Systems business |
Zdroj: | International Journal of Cancer. 129:1180-1189 |
ISSN: | 0020-7136 |
Popis: | In low and middle income countries (LMIC), high-quality disease registration is difficult to achieve in the setting of inadequate healthcare infrastructure and political or economical instability. In this article, we explore the potential of geographic information systems (GIS) to add value to the understanding of childhood cancer patterns in the West Bank, despite a variety of obstacles to disease registration. All incidence cases of childhood cancers (under the age 15) from 1998 to 2007 were collected from the West Bank Cancer Registry. Temporal, spatial and space–time analyses were performed using the SatScan software developed by Martin Kulldorff and the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The analyses were categorized into the following groups: all childhood cancer, leukemias, acute lymphocytic leukemia, lymphomas, brain and central nervous system (CNS) cancers and remaining cancers (excluding leukemia, lymphoma and CNS tumors). The temporal analysis revealed that cancer registration was more complete from 1998 to 2000 (p 5 0.0162), and that leukemia registration was severely deficient from 2003 to 2005 (p 5 0.0012). The spatial analysis showed a concentration of cancer in metropolitan districts where referral hospitals are based. Under registration was detected in the northern districts of Jenin and Tulkarm (RR 5 0.59, p 5 0.0059), more prominent from 2002 to 2005 (RR 5 0.33, p 5 0.0006). The analysis for high rates found a cluster of lymphoma in town of Dura and its surrounding agricultural villages (RR 5 4.10, p 5 0.0023). Our study reveals that the application of GIS tools to registry data in LMIC can help to identify geographical patterns in cancer registration and healthcare accessibility, generating priorities for future health research and policy in resource-limited areas. Population-based cancer registries (PBCR) have been recognized as an integral part in our study and monitoring of cancer. In low and middle income countries (LMIC), highquality cancer registration is difficult to achieve in the setting of economic or political instability, substandard healthcare infrastructure, imprecise population and death records and massive population movements. 1 Only 60 of 122 submitted reports from PBCRs in Africa, Asia and Latin America met international standards to be included in CI5-IX for the period of 1998–2002, covering � 4% of the total population in these continents. 2 The lack of institutions and mechanisms |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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