Examining the Completeness of Industry and Occupation Data Among Patients Newly Diagnosed with Cancer in North Carolina.

Q2 Medicine North Carolina Medical Journal Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.18043/001c.121418
Kim Angelon-Gaetz, Osaremhen Ikhile, Howard R D Gordon, Melissa Pearson, Chandrika Rao
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Abstract

Background: Occupational exposure to toxic substances has been associated with cancer. Including industry and occupation (I/O) in cancer surveillance can help identify potential links between occupational exposures and cancers using data already collected to monitor statewide cancer trends. I/O reporting is required in cancer registries and recently in death records. In this study, we examined the completeness of I/O information in North Carolina cancer and death certificate data.

Methods: The North Carolina Central Cancer Registry (NC CCR) is the sole repository of North Carolina cancer incidence data. NC CCR (2020-2021) and death certificate data (2020-2022) were analyzed for completeness of I/O. NC CCR incidence records for 1995-2021 diagnoses were linked to North Carolina death files (2020-2022).

Results: NC CCR data had I/O in 17% to 51% of the cases, depending on cancer type. I/O was included in 41% of 2020 death certificates and increased to a 99.9% inclusion in 2021 and 2022 death certificates. In 2020, 20,018 (18%) of 109,677 total deaths matched with a cancer record during NC CCR data linkage. In 2021, 20,225 (16%) of 119,237 total deaths matched with a cancer record, and in 2022, 20,367 (17%) of 116,406 total deaths matched to a cancer record.

Limitations: Data presented here only examine the completeness of 10 cancer types that the NC CCR regularly analyzes using the most recent data available (2021).

Conclusion: Health care providers should routinely record I/O using the standards explained in the training for providers on I/O data collection, provided by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, and should increase their frequency of reporting I/O to NC CCR. Death certificate data may provide I/O data for individuals whose information is missing from cancer registry data.

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研究北卡罗来纳州新诊断癌症患者的行业和职业数据的完整性。
背景:职业性接触有毒物质与癌症有关。将行业和职业(I/O)纳入癌症监测,有助于利用已收集到的数据确定职业暴露与癌症之间的潜在联系,从而监测全州癌症趋势。癌症登记和最近的死亡记录都要求报告 I/O。在这项研究中,我们检查了北卡罗来纳州癌症和死亡证明数据中 I/O 信息的完整性:北卡罗来纳州中央癌症登记处(NC CCR)是北卡罗来纳州癌症发病率数据的唯一存储库。对 NC CCR(2020-2021 年)和死亡证明数据(2020-2022 年)进行了 I/O 完整性分析。将1995-2021年诊断的NC CCR发病记录与北卡罗来纳州死亡档案(2020-2022年)进行链接:根据癌症类型的不同,北卡罗来纳州 CCR 数据中 17% 至 51% 的病例有 I/O。2020 年 41% 的死亡证明中包含 I/O,2021 年和 2022 年的死亡证明中包含 I/O 的比例增至 99.9%。2020 年,109,677 例死亡病例中的 20,018 例(18%)与 NC CCR 数据连接期间的癌症记录相匹配。2021 年,在 119,237 例死亡中,有 20,225 例(16%)与癌症记录相匹配;2022 年,在 116,406 例死亡中,有 20,367 例(17%)与癌症记录相匹配:本文提供的数据仅使用最新数据(2021 年)检查了北卡罗来纳州癌症研究中心定期分析的 10 种癌症类型的完整性:医疗服务提供者应使用北卡罗来纳州卫生与公众服务部提供的医疗服务提供者 I/O 数据收集培训中解释的标准定期记录 I/O,并应增加向 NC CCR 报告 I/O 的频率。死亡证明数据可为癌症登记数据中缺少信息的个人提供 I/O 数据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
North Carolina Medical Journal
North Carolina Medical Journal Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
121
期刊介绍: NCMJ, the North Carolina Medical Journal, is meant to be read by everyone with an interest in improving the health of North Carolinians. We seek to make the Journal a sounding board for new ideas, new approaches, and new policies that will deliver high quality health care, support healthy choices, and maintain a healthy environment in our state.
期刊最新文献
Assessing Local Public Health Governance in North Carolina Across Organizational and Governance Configurations. Behavioral Health Trends Among Perinatal North Carolina Medicaid Beneficiaries. Creating Recovery-Ready Communities. Drug Misuse Among Pediatric Patients: Encounters in the Prehospital Field. Evolution of the Science and Perception of Harm Reduction.
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