Measuring cancer in indigenous populations.

Ann Epidemiol

Section of Cancer Surveillance, International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France.

Published: May 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • An estimated 370 million indigenous peoples live in 90 countries, often experiencing significant health disparities compared to nonindigenous populations.
  • Cancer surveillance is crucial for understanding and addressing these disparities, but it faces challenges that may lead to underreported cancer rates among indigenous communities.
  • Key issues include difficulties in identifying indigenous populations, biases in data collection and survival analysis, and the need for improved engagement with these communities in the data process.

Article Abstract

It is estimated that there are 370 million indigenous peoples in 90 countries globally. Indigenous peoples generally face substantial disadvantage and poorer health status compared with nonindigenous peoples. Population-level cancer surveillance provides data to set priorities, inform policies, and monitor progress over time. Measuring the cancer burden of vulnerable subpopulations, particularly indigenous peoples, is problematic. There are a number of practical and methodological issues potentially resulting in substantial underestimation of cancer incidence and mortality rates, and biased survival rates, among indigenous peoples. This, in turn, may result in a deprioritization of cancer-related programs and policies among these populations. This commentary describes key issues relating to cancer surveillance among indigenous populations including 1) suboptimal identification of indigenous populations, 2) numerator-denominator bias, 3) problems with data linkage in survival analysis, and 4) statistical analytic considerations. We suggest solutions that can be implemented to strengthen the visibility of indigenous peoples around the world. These include acknowledgment of the central importance of full engagement of indigenous peoples with all data-related processes, encouraging the use of indigenous identifiers in national and regional data sets and mitigation and/or careful assessment of biases inherent in cancer surveillance methods for indigenous peoples.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.annepidem.2018.02.005DOI Listing

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