Geospatial Approaches to Cancer Epidemiology 1: Risk Factors and Disparities
The session recording will be archived on the site until June 25th, 2023
This session was streamed but not recorded
Date: 3/24/2023
Time: 8:30 AM - 9:50 AM
Room: Capitol Ballroom 5, Hyatt Regency, Fourth Floor
Type: Paper, Hybrid session with both in-person and virtual presenters
Theme: Toward More Just Geographies
Curated Track:
Sponsor Group(s):
Health and Medical Geography Specialty Group
Organizer(s):
Weichuan Dong Case Western Reserve University
Qinjin Fan American Cancer Society
Changzhen Wang University of Alabama
Chair(s):
Weichuan Dong Case Western Reserve University
Qinjin Fan American Cancer Society
Description:
Cancer research has a long tradition of using geospatial approaches. The earliest application could date back to 1870 when mapping techniques were used to visualize cancer mortality in Britain (Haviland 1892). Cancer research was subsequently gone through several phases ranging from traditional analysis approaches in epidemiology, modern epidemiology, and to location-based geospatial approaches to address the challenges in the full spectrum of cancer control and prevention. Recently, President Barack Obama signed the bipartisan Trevor’s Law into law, the purpose was to ensure government agencies, in coordination with institutes of higher education, to conduct investigations to help address cancer clusters and factors that may contribute to the creation of potential cancer clusters (Congress 2016). The signing of the Trevor’s Law implies an important role played by geography in cancer control and prevention.
Cancer occurs in specific places which has specific natural, built, and social characteristics. Nowadays, the risk of death caused by cancer is more accurately predicted by a patient's zip code than their genetic code. In the era of big data and with the advances in data science technologies, effective and efficient tools under the framework of geographic thinking need to be developed and adopted in addressing important questions in cancer control and prevention.
Related topics include but are not limited to
• cancer mapping and geovisualization
• geocoding of cancer data
• cancer cluster analysis
• accessibility to cancer care
• delineation of cancer service areas or catchment areas
• cancer disparities and inequalities
• telehealth in cancer control
• spatial behavior of cancer patients
• social determinants of cancer
• environmental risk factors of cancer
• cancer screening and prevention
• education and community outreach for cancer control
• cancer treatment and clinical trials participation
• cancer and social media
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This session is a part of the Geospatial Health Research Symposium, which is organized by the Health and Medical Geography Specialty Group. This yearly symposium aims to bring together national and international scholars, practitioners, and policy makers from different specialties, institutions, sectors, and continents to share ideas, findings, methodologies, and technologies, and to establish and strengthen personal connections, communication channels, and research collaborations. For more information about the symposium, please feel free to contact Paul Delamater at pld@email.unc.edu.
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References
Congress H.R.2576 114th. Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act. Public Law No. 114-182. 2016. Available from https://www.congress.gov/bill/114th-congress/house-bill/2576.
Haviland, A. 1892. The geographical distribution of disease in Great Britain: Sonnenschein.
Sahar, L., S. L. Foster, R. L. Sherman, K. A. Henry, D. W. Goldberg, D. G. Stinchcomb, and J. E. Bauer. 2019. GIScience and cancer: State of the art and trends for cancer surveillance and epidemiology. Cancer 125 (15):2544-2560.
The American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network. 2020. The costs of cancer, 49.
Presentations (if applicable) and Session Agenda:
Vanhvilai Douangchai Wills, American Cancer Society |
Access to government funded cancer clinical trials – geospatial evaluation of clinical trials infrastructure in the US |
Grace Christensen, Brigham Young University |
Spatiotemporal Shifts in Brain and Nervous System Cancer Mortality Rates from 1999-2018 and their Association with Gender |
Qinjin Fan |
Small Area Estimation of Black-White Racial Disparity in Female Breast Cancer Survival Through a Bayesian Spatial Shared Component Model |
Benjamin Ojo |
Kidney Cancer Incidence and Occupation in Different Climate Zones in the United States |
Connor Donegan, University of Texas - Dallas |
Stress-Testing Epidemiological Theory with Plausible Reasoning: An Investigation of Colorectal Cancer Inequalities in Texas |
Non-Presenting Participants
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Geospatial Approaches to Cancer Epidemiology 1: Risk Factors and Disparities
Description
Type: Paper, Hybrid session with both in-person and virtual presenters
Date: 3/24/2023
Time: 8:30 AM - 9:50 AM
Room: Capitol Ballroom 5, Hyatt Regency, Fourth Floor
Contact the Primary Organizer
Weichuan Dong Case Western Reserve University
weichuan.dong@case.edu