Social networks, social determinants, and mortality: Western New York Exposures and Breast Cancer study
Shipra Gandhi, Jing Nie, Maurizio Trevisan, Kristopher Attwood, Jo L Freudenheim

TL;DR
This study found that lower household income is linked to higher mortality in both breast cancer patients and healthy women, while social factors like friendships and household size are not.
Contribution
The study uniquely compares social determinants of mortality in both breast cancer patients and healthy women using a population-based design.
Findings
Lower household income was associated with higher all-cause mortality in both breast cancer patients and healthy women.
Social factors like number of friends, frequency of seeing friends, marital status, and household size were not linked to mortality.
The association between income and mortality was similar in both breast cancer patients and healthy women.
Abstract
There are few studies of social support and other social determinants of health after breast cancer diagnosis and their associations with mortality; results have been inconclusive. Further, it is not known if observed associations are specific to women with breast cancer diagnosis or if associations would be similar among healthy women. Women with incident, pathologically confirmed invasive breast cancer, stage I-IV (n = 1012), and healthy frequency age-matched participants (n = 2036) answered a social support questionnaire in prospective follow-up of a population-based case-control study, the Western New York Exposures and Breast Cancer Study. At interview, all participants were aged 35-79 years and resident of 2 counties in Western New York State. Mortality status was ascertained from the National Death Index. Participants were queried regarding the number of their close friends,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening · Cancer survivorship and care · Health disparities and outcomes
