Inequities in Breast Cancer Outcomes in Chile: An Analysis of Case Fatality and Survival Rates (2007-2018)
Benjam\'in Madariaga, Susana Mondschein, Soledad Torres

TL;DR
This study analyzes disparities in breast cancer outcomes in Chile from 2007 to 2018, revealing significant inequalities based on healthcare provider type and region, with private providers and metropolitan areas showing better survival rates.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of breast cancer fatality and survival disparities in Chile, highlighting socioeconomic and regional inequalities using national datasets.
Findings
Women in private healthcare have lower fatality rates.
Higher survival rates are observed in metropolitan regions.
Incidence and mortality rates increased over the study period.
Abstract
Introduction: The goal of this paper is to study inequities in breast cancer (BC) health care outcomes for Chilean women, including case fatality (FR) and survival rates (SR), stratified by type of health care provider and geographical area. A secondary goal is to estimate BC incidence (IR) and mortality (MR) rates by health care providers and region. Methods: We used two public anonymized databases provided by the Ministry of Health: the national death and hospital discharges datasets. For survival analysis, we used the Kaplan Meier product-limit estimator (KM) with a 95% ci and the Cox proportional hazards model (CM) with null-hypothesis significance testing of p>0.001. Results: We considered a cohort of 58,254 and 16,615 BC hospital discharges and deaths for the period 2007-2018. New cases and deaths due to BC increased by 43.6% and 33.6% respectively. Avg age-adjusted IR and MR were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening · Primary Care and Health Outcomes · Global Public Health Policies and Epidemiology
