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Clinical, demographic factors, and substance use among Hispanic and non-Hispanic young adult childhood cancer survivors. | LitMetric

Clinical, demographic factors, and substance use among Hispanic and non-Hispanic young adult childhood cancer survivors.

J Psychosoc Oncol

Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Program in Public Health, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California, USA.

Published: October 2024

Purpose: The purpose of this study is to examine the protective and risk factors of substance use behaviors (tobacco, marijuana, e-cigarette, and alcohol) among young adult childhood cancer survivors. The study focused on clinical (receipt of cancer-related follow-up care, treatment intensity, late effects, depressive symptoms, self-rated health) and demographic (race/ethnicity, neighborhood socioeconomic status) factors and their associations with substance use.

Methods: Participants were from the Project Forward cohort, a population-based study of young adult survivors of childhood cancers. Participants ( = 1166, M = 25.1 years) were recruited through the Los Angeles Cancer Surveillance Program (Cancer Registry covering Los Angeles County, California). Multivariate path analyses were performed with substance use as the outcome variables and clinical and demographic factors as independent variables. Covariates included age and sex.

Finding: Substance use was positively associated with depressive symptoms, and inversely associated with cancer-related follow-up care, female sex, age, Hispanic ethnicity, treatment intensity, and self-rated health. Neighborhood SES was inversely associated with tobacco use, while being positively associated with binge drinking and e-cigarette use. The results highlight the interrelationship between the clinical and demographic variables and their associations with different substance use.

Conclusion: Findings support the need for effective interventions targeting substance use behavior among CCS. This will help improve long-term outcomes and mitigate the risk for early morbidity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11415543PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07347332.2024.2326148DOI Listing

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