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Evaluation and Implementation of State Comprehensive Cancer Control Plans: Evolving Lessons

Evaluation and Implementation of State Comprehensive Cancer Control Plans: Evolving Lessons. APHA 2005 Annual Meeting Epidemiology Section Session 3187.0 12:30–2:00 PM Monday, December 12, 2005. Utilizing research and data: Use of epidemiologic data in community assessments.

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Evaluation and Implementation of State Comprehensive Cancer Control Plans: Evolving Lessons

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  1. Evaluation and Implementation of State Comprehensive Cancer Control Plans: Evolving Lessons APHA 2005 Annual Meeting Epidemiology Section Session 3187.0 12:30–2:00 PM Monday, December 12, 2005

  2. Utilizing research and data: Use of epidemiologic data in community assessments Jung Y. Kim, MPH Department of Preventive Medicine,UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School

  3. Co-authors of this presentation include: Margaret L. Knight, RN, MEd Daniel M. Rosenblum, PhD Judith B. Klotz, DrPH Stanley H. Weiss, MD

  4. Standardized Evaluation • Goal: To identify greatest cancer burden and health disparities, in order to propose local and statewide priorities and to assess progress toward reducing cancer burden • Standardized methods and time periods for cancer data are critical to establish common baseline data and enable valid comparisons • To be discussed: • Data utilized for this assessment and data sources • Common errors in data use and interpretation

  5. Data and Sources • Demographics and health status indicators • Cancer incidence and stage at diagnosis • Cancer mortality • Healthy New Jersey 2010 objectives • Staging of cancer • Prevalence • Estimates of medically underserved populations

  6. Demographics • Source: U.S. Census Bureau • Data files generated usingAmerican FactFinder, www.factfinder.census.gov/ • Characterize population’s age, gender, race, ethnicity, languages spoken at home, ability to speak English • Identify municipalities with populations of low income, low educational attainment, high poverty, high unemployment

  7. Demographics Race and ethnicity • Race and ethnicity are separate categories, and are not mutually exclusive.Hispanics/Latinos may be of any race. • While Census data allows multiple races and combined race/ethnicity, other data sources may not use similar categories. • Thus, the ability to compare race/ethnicity categories depends upon the data, i.e., whether data exists on white Hispanics, black Hispanics, as well as white non-Hispanics, black non-Hispanics, etc. – enabling direct comparisons of either race or Hispanic ethnicity

  8. Demographics Health Status Indicators • Source: • Center for Health Statistics,NJ Department of Health and Senior Services, www.state.nj.us/health/chs/index.html • CDC’s BRFSS, www.cdc.gov/brfss/index.htm • Birth rate, death rate, percentage of low birth weight babies, infant mortality rate, estimated obese and overweight populations, estimated population who smoke

  9. Cancer Incidence • Source: New Jersey State Cancer Registry, Cancer Epidemiology Services Division of the NJ Department of Health & Senior Services, by special request • Counts, age-adjusted rates, and stage at diagnosis provided by • Gender • Age group (15-39, 40-49, 50-64, 65-74, 75+) • Race (black, white) and Hispanic ethnicity

  10. Cancer Mortality • Source: Cancer P.L.A.N.E.T.,State Cancer Profiles, http://statecancerprofiles.cancer.gov/ • User specifies data parameters • Geographic region (state or county level) • Type of cancer • Race (White, Black, American Indian/ Alaskan Native, Asian/Pacific Islander, Hispanic) • Gender

  11. Cancer Mortality • Special request to NCI for counts and age-adjusted rates by county • Gender • Age group (0-49, 50+ and 0-64, 65+) • Race (black, white) and Hispanic ethnicity

  12. Age Adjustment • Rates of cancer incidence and mortality among different age groups are vastly different • Age adjustment allows comparison among various groups that may have different age structures • Eliminates the effect of the underlying age distribution of the population • Rates age-adjusted to a standard population by 5-year age groups (19 groups)

  13. Age Adjustment • Since 1940, the age distribution of the U.S. population has dramatically changed 194019702000 Median age (years) 29.0 28.135.3 % of Total population, selected groups < 5 years 8.0 8.4 6.8 35 to 44 years 13.9 11.4 16.0 65 years + 6.8 9.912.4 Age group with highest % of population 15-24 5-14 35-44 Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000 Special Reports, Series CNSR-4; Demographic Trends in the 20th Century, 2002; Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2003.

  14. Age Adjustment • Prior to data year 1999, reports of incidence and mortality rates were age-adjusted to earlier populations, commonly • 1970 U.S. standard population for incidence • 1940 U.S. standard population for mortality • Beginning with the 1999 reporting year, the U.S. DHHS required health data to be age-adjusted using the 2000 U.S. standard population. Source: Martin, RM. Age standardization of death rates in New Jersey: Implications of a change in the standard population. NJDHSS, Center for Health Statistics, 2003.

  15. Age Adjustment • Disease rates that vary by age can be affected enormously by a change in standardization Age-Adjusted DeathPop. StandardPercent Rate in NJ (per 100,000)19402000Change All causes 460.3 861.4 87% Cancer, all sites 127.9 212.5 66% • These differences in rates are purely statistical and are due to the aging of the U.S. population, since the elderly are given greater weight when using the 2000 population standard. Source: Martin, RM. Age standardization of death rates in New Jersey: Implications of a change in the standard population. NJDHSS, Center for Health Statistics, 2003.

  16. Healthy New Jersey 2010 • Incidence and mortality target rates in Healthy New Jersey 2010 (HNJ2010) were generated • prior to the release of the NJ-CCCP • prior to release of the 2000 population standard* • These HNJ2010 rates should not be compared to rates age-adjusted using the 2000 standard population * In May 2005, NJDHSS published updated baselines, targets, and preferred endpoints for cancer incidence and mortality objectives using the 2000 standard population.

  17. Healthy New Jersey 2010 • The 1996–2000 breast cancer mortality rate for all females in New Jersey was 31.3 per 100,000 Recalculated As published using 2000 in HNJ2010 standard pop.* 1998 Baseline 24.7 31.2 Target rate 17.0 21.5 Percent reduction 31% 31% * Target recalculated to achieve equivalent percent reduction (All rates per 100,000)

  18. Staging of Cancer • Stage is determined just once for cancer registry data – at the time of diagnosis • Categories in major staging scheme: in situ (non-invasive, only reported for some cancers), localized, regional, distant • Unstaged cancer – insufficient information to classify; no conclusion can be made about severity of cancer • Comparisons of the stage distributions between populations are important, but potentially problematic due to the unstaged cases

  19. Staging of Cancer • Proportion of unstaged cancers varies by region and cancer site, typically between 10%–20% • Although elimination of unstaged cases and recomputation of percentages might appear straightforward, a complete analysis should include the reasons for variation in the unstaged proportion, which are not typically available

  20. Prevalence • One measure of the burden of a disease • At a given point in time, how many people have the disease • Total cancer prevalence at the county level was not available • Given its importance, a method for estimating prevalence was developed

  21. Estimates of MUAs Medically Underserved Areas (MUAs) • Source: NCI’s Cancer Information Service • Customized Consumer Health Profile maps and data provided for each county, identifying geographic areas of potentially medically underserved populations • Consumer marketing profiles developed using demographics, information on health behavior from various health and consumer surveys

  22. Some Common Errors in Data Use and Interpretation 1. Differences in rates are often over-emphasized or sensationalized Example: Breast cancer incidence rate County A = 144.2 per 100,000 State = 138.5 per 100,000 • Although the rate for County A was 5th highest in the state, it was only 4% higher than the overall rate for the state • This minor difference, in our opinion, should not be emphasized because it is insufficient to justify a major change in policy or funding for that county

  23. Some Common Errors in Data Use and Interpretation 2. Differences in gender-specific rates overlooked Example: Total cancer incidence rate County B had a combined rate (male+female) that ranked 7th highest (worst) rate of 21 counties in the state, but • Rate among females: 2ndhighest • Rate among males: 20th highest (2ndlowest)

  24. Some Common Errors in Data Use and Interpretation 3. Neglecting sample size when comparing distribution at stage of diagnosis and failing to perform appropriate statistical calculations Example: Oral cancer cases (for which staging information was available) diagnosed at the distant stage In County C, 13% among black females 7% among white females • 13% represents 2 out of just 15 staged cases • Too few cases to base conclusion on percentages alone • Using Fisher’s Exact Test, this difference was not statistically significant (p=0.605; 95% CI, 0.34-13.43)

  25. Some Common Errors in Data Use and Interpretation 4. Use of single-year data at the county level Example: Total cancer mortality County D reported that it had the highest combined mortality rate in the state. The cited rate was valid for that year (2000), but • One of the smallest counties in the state • Since small numbers can vary substantially year to year, trends for many chronic diseases are best based on statistics such as five-year averages • Five-year averages showed no significant disparity between that county and the rest of the state (for both 1996–2000 and 1998–2002 periods)

  26. Some Common Errors in Data Use and Interpretation 5. Comparing rates for race to Hispanic ethnicity Example: Cervical cancer incidence County E reported the rate for Hispanic women was higher than that for white women. • New Jersey data for Hispanic women include some women who are white, since race and ethnicity are not mutually exclusive • The rate for Hispanic women could be compared to the rate for non-Hispanic women • If the available rates are age-adjusted, comparison to all women is only valid when the proportion of Hispanics in the relevant age strata of the total population is low

  27. Some Common Errors in Data Use and Interpretation 6. Comparison of rates based on different time periods 7. Use of hospital discharge data as source for a county’s cancer burden • Not a valid approach – counts for these data are based on discharges, not patients • Thus, patients with multiple hospital stays are counted multiple times • Many cancer patients do undergo multiple hospitalizations

  28. Summary • Accurate, up-to-date assessment of community resources and identification of the community’s specific cancer burden and needs are needed to influence public support, funding, and policy • Understanding common mistakes such as those in the examples above may help guide the oversight of capacity and needs assessments, particularly the appropriate use and interpretation of epidemiologic data, which are essential to successful implementation at local and state levels

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