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The global cancer divide: Relationships between national healthcare resources and cancer outcomes in high-income vs. middle- and low-income countries

机译:全球癌症鸿沟:高收入国家与中低收入国家的国家医疗资源与癌症结局之间的关系

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Background: Cancer continues to rise as a contributor to premature death in the developing world. Despite this, little is known about whether cancer outcomes are related to a country's income level, and what aspects of national healthcare systems are associated with improved cancer outcomes. Methods: The most recent estimates of cancer incidence and mortality were used to calculate mortality-to-incidence ratio (MIR) for the 85 countries with reliable data. Countries were categorized according to high-income (Gross Domestic Product (GDP)>$15,000) or middle/low-income (GDP<$15,000), and a multivariate linear regression model was used to determine the association between healthcare system indicators and cancer MIR. Indicators study included per capita GDP, overall total healthcare expenditure (THE), THE as a proportion of GDP, total external beam radiotherapy devices (TEBD) per capita, physician density, and the year 2000 WHO healthcare system rankings. Results: Cancer MIR in high-income countries (0.47) was significantly lower than that of middle/low-income countries (0.64), with a p<0.001. In high-income countries, GDP, health expenditure and TEBD showed significant inverse correlations with overall cancer MIR. A $3040 increase in GDP (p=0.004), a $379 increase in THE (p<0.001), or an increase of 0.59 TEBD per 100,000 population (p=0.027) were all associated with a 0.01 decrease in cancer MIR. In middle/low-income countries, only WHO scores correlated with decreased cancer MIR (p=0.022); 12 specific cancer types also showed similar significant correlations (p<0.05) as overall cancer MIR. Conclusions: The analysis of this study suggested that cancer MIR is greater in middle/low-income countries. Furthermore, the WHO healthcare score was associated with improved cancer outcomes in middle/low-income countries while absolute levels of financial resources and infrastructure played a more important role in high-income countries.
机译:背景:癌症继续成为发展中国家过早死亡的诱因。尽管如此,人们对癌症结局是否与一个国家的收入水平相关,以及国家医疗体系的哪些方面与改善癌症结局相关的知之甚少。方法:使用最新的癌症发病率和死亡率估算值,以可靠的数据计算85个国家的死亡率与发病率(MIR)。根据高收入(国内生产总值(GDP)> 15,000美元)或中/低收入(GDP <15,000美元)对国家进行分类,并使用多元线性回归模型确定医疗保健系统指标与癌症MIR之间的关联。指标研究包括人均GDP,总体医疗总支出(THE),THE在GDP中所占的比例,人均总体外放射治疗设备(TEBD),医师密度以及2000年WHO卫生保健系统排名。结果:高收入国家的癌症MIR(0.47)明显低于中/低收入国家的癌症MIR(0.64),p <0.001。在高收入国家,GDP,医疗保健支出和TEBD与总体癌症MIR呈显着负相关。 GDP的增加$ 3040(p = 0.004),THE的增加$ 379(p <0.001)或每100,000个人口增加0.59 TEBD(p = 0.027)与癌症MIR降低0.01有关。在中等/低收入国家,只有WHO评分与降低的癌症MIR相关(p = 0.022); 12种特定癌症类型也显示出与总体癌症MIR相似的显着相关性(p <0.05)。结论:这项研究的分析表明,中低收入国家的癌症MIR更高。此外,世卫组织的医疗保健得分与中/低收入国家的癌症结局改善相关,而财政资源和基础设施的绝对水平在高收入国家中起着更为重要的作用。

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