Cancer risk factors and screening in the off-reserve First Nations, Métis and non-Aboriginal populations of Ontario.

D R Withrow, A Amartey, L D Marrett
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Abstract

Introduction: This study describes the prevalence of smoking, obesity, sedentary behaviour/physical activity, fruit and vegetable consumption and alcohol use as well as the uptake of breast, cervical and colorectal cancer screening among First Nations and Métis adults in Ontario and compares these to that of the non-Aboriginal population.

Methods: We used the Canadian Community Health Survey (2007 to 2011 combined) to calculate prevalence estimates for the 3 ethnocultural populations.

Results: First Nations and Métis adults were significantly more likely than non-Aboriginal adults to self-report smoking and/or to be classified as obese. Alcohol use exceeding cancer prevention recommendations and inadequate fruit and vegetable consumption were more common in First Nations people than in the non-Aboriginal population. First Nations women were more likely to report having had a Fecal Occult Blood Test in the previous 2 years than non-Aboriginal women. No significant differences across the 3 ethnocultural groups were found for breast and cervical screening among women or colorectal screening among men.

Conclusion: Without intervention, we are likely to continue to see a significant burden of smoking- and obesity-related cancers in Ontario's Aboriginal population.

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安大略保留地外的第一民族、土著和非土著人口的癌症风险因素和筛查。
前言:本研究描述了安大略省第一民族和土著成年人中吸烟、肥胖、久坐行为/体育活动、水果和蔬菜消费和饮酒的流行程度,以及乳腺癌、宫颈癌和结直肠癌筛查的接受情况,并将其与非土著人口进行了比较。方法:我们使用加拿大社区健康调查(2007年至2011年合并)来计算3种民族文化人群的患病率估计。结果:与非土著成年人相比,第一民族和土著成年人更有可能自我报告吸烟和/或被归类为肥胖。饮酒超过癌症预防建议以及水果和蔬菜消费不足在第一民族中比在非土著人口中更为普遍。原住民妇女比非原住民妇女更有可能报告在过去两年内进行过粪便隐血检查。在三个民族文化群体中,女性的乳房和宫颈筛查以及男性的结肠直肠筛查没有发现显著差异。结论:如果不进行干预,我们可能会继续看到安大略省土著居民中吸烟和肥胖相关癌症的显著负担。
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来源期刊
Chronic Diseases and Injuries in Canada
Chronic Diseases and Injuries in Canada PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
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Editorial. Bicycle injuries and injury prevention. Injuries and helmet use related to non-motorized wheeled activities among pediatric patients. Intentional injury hospitalizations in geographical areas with a high percentage of Aboriginal-identity residents, 2004/2005 to 2009/2010. Modelling preventive effectiveness to estimate the equity tipping point: at what coverage can individual preventive interventions reduce socioeconomic disparities in diabetes risk? Cancer risk factors and screening in the off-reserve First Nations, Métis and non-Aboriginal populations of Ontario.
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