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Urban-rural differences in gynaecological cancer occurrence in a central region of Italy: 1978-1982 and 1998-2002.

TLDR
The lower breast cancer incidence in the rural area could be due to lesser compliance with screening procedures which, up until 2002, were not provided in the form of mass-screenings throughout the region by the Regional Health Department.
Abstract
Differences in gynaecological cancer incidence and mortality in the urban and rural areas of the Umbria region (central Italy) were investigated. All women with primary invasive breast cancers, uterine cervix and uterine corpus, and ovarian cancers diagnosed during the periods 1978-1982 and 1998-2002 were identified and analysed according to place of residence (either urban or rural). Mortality data were supplied by the National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT) for the period 1978 to 1982, whereas for the 1994-2002 period they were supplied by the Regional Nominative Causes of Death Registry (ReNCaM). Incident cases considered were taken from an ad hoc survey for the first period and from the Umbrian Population Cancer Registry database for the second one. For each site the age-adjusted incidence (AAIR) and mortality (AADR) rates were calculated. The expected number of rural cases was obtained from indirect standardisation with urban incidence and mortality rates of several sites. The significance of the observed expected ratios (SIRs for incidence and SMRs for mortality) and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals were based on the Poisson distribution. Urbanisation levels were established following the classification of the Italian Institute of Statistics. For all sites, excluding the ovary during the most recent period, the SIR relative to rural areas was below 1, but the rates were statistically significant only for breast cancer in both periods (SIR 0.81, 95% CI 0.74-0.88 and SIR 0.82, 95% CI 0.77-0.88, respectively) and for cervix uteri in the first period (SIR 0.77, 95% CI 0.59-0.94). The lower breast cancer incidence in the rural area could also be due to lesser compliance with screening procedures which, up until 2002, were not provided in the form of mass-screenings throughout the region by the Regional Health Department. These results underscore the need for continued efforts to provide preventive health services to medically underserved women throughout Umbria, including rural communities. Underutilisation of preventive healthcare services may result in failure to identify healthcare problems that might be successfully managed with medication or lifestyle changes, as well as missed opportunities to prevent potentially life-threatening diseases.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Urban-rural health differences: primary care data and self reported data render different results.

TL;DR: According to GP-records, acute somatic and chronic diseases were more frequently presented in rural areas, at the same time self reported health problems point to a better health in rural Areas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Longitudinal patterns of breast cancer screening: mammography, clinical, and breast self-examinations in a rural and urban setting.

TL;DR: The poorer breast cancer survival among rural women is unlikely to be explained by differences in mammography service use, and a substantial proportion of the population may be experiencing overscreening by conducting all three types of breast screening.
Journal ArticleDOI

Life in urban areas and breast cancer risk in the French E3N cohort

TL;DR: Being born in an urban area is associated with a weak increase in BC risk, which may be suggestive of higher exposure to air pollution and to other environmental exposures, to be investigated in future studies.
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Ovarian Cancer Incidence: Current and Comprehensive Statistics

TL;DR: The purpose of this chapter is to present global comprehensive ovarian cancer incidence data, and every effort is made to present only high-quality data from population-based data sources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rural-metropolitan disparities in ovarian cancer survival: a statewide population-based study

TL;DR: Although ovarian cancer patients residing in rural counties had different characteristics compared with metropolitan residents, there did not observe an association between rural residence and risk of all-cause nor ovarian cancer-specific death after adjusting for confounders.
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