On 04/06/2022 8:30 AM Bernadette Phelan <bphelan@azdot.gov> wrote:
Could you please send me a copy of the complete article?
Also, this finding of transportation barriers faced by vulnerable populations particularly those with physical disabilities is not new. That is a widely known fact in the field of healthcare service systems.
Bernadette E. Phelan, Ph.D.Sr. Research Project ManagerArizona Department of Transportation
Research Center, MB 310B, Rm 198
206 S. 17th Avenue, Phoenix, AZ 85007602-712-3138![]()
You received this because you are subscribed to the mailing list maintained by the TRB Health committee (AME70). To unsubscribe, learn more about the list or visit the archives see https://mailman.chrispy.net/postorius/lists/trbhealth.mailman.chrispy.net/On Wed, Apr 6, 2022 at 4:10 AM Mindell, Jenny <j.mindell@ucl.ac.uk> wrote:
You received this because you are subscribed to the mailing list maintained by the TRB Health committee (AME70). To unsubscribe, learn more about the list or visit the archives see https://mailman.chrispy.net/postorius/lists/trbhealth.mailman.chrispy.net/Thanks. I couldn’t access the paper. Did they adjust for SEP or health behaviours? E.g. people with cancer are more likely to be smokers with a poor diet and are more likely to be from disadvantaged communities, so it’s presumably confounding and transport barriers are due to poor provision and poverty not to the cancer.
Jenny
From: Berrigan, David (NIH/NCI) [E] <berrigad@mail.nih.gov>
Sent: 01 April 2022 13:53
To: trbhealth@mailman.chrispy.net
Subject: [TRBHealth] ASCO Post: US Cancer Survivors More Likely To Report Delays In Healthcare Due To Transportation Barriers Than Individuals Without History Of Cancer, Study Finds
Let me know if you want a copy of the complete article
US Cancer Survivors More Likely To Report Delays In Healthcare Due To Transportation Barriers Than Individuals Without History Of Cancer, Study Finds.
The ASCO Post (3/31, Stenger) reports, “In a study,” investigators “found that U.S. cancer survivors were more likely to report delays in health care due to transportation barriers than persons without a history of cancer, with the difference driven by barriers among younger cancer survivors.” The findings were published in a research letter in JAMA Oncology.
Self-reported Transportation Barriers to Health Care Among US Cancer Survivors.
JAMA Oncol. 2022 Mar 24. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2022.0143.
David Berrigan PhD MPH
Behavioral Research Program
Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences
National Cancer Institute
9609 Medical Center Drive MSC 7344
Room 3E342
Bethesda MD 20892-7344
Cell: 240-660-0171
Phone: 240-276-6752
Fax: 240-276-7906
To connect with committee visit: https://trbhealth.org
To connect with committee visit: https://trbhealth.org