The Impact of Digital Inequities on Nasal and Paranasal-Sinus Cancer Disparities in the United States: A Cohort Study
David J Fei-Zhang, Amelia Sherron Lawrence, Daniel C Chelius, Anthony M Sheyn, Jeffrey C Rastatter

TL;DR
This study finds that unequal access to digital resources worsens cancer care outcomes for nasal and paranasal sinus cancers in the U.S.
Contribution
The study introduces the Digital Inequity Index to quantify how digital access disparities affect cancer care outcomes.
Findings
Higher digital inequity is linked to shorter follow-up times and reduced odds of receiving surgery or radiation for nasal and paranasal sinus cancers.
Electronic device and service availability had stronger impacts on care disparities than income-broadband ratios.
Digital inequities affect cancer care even after accounting for traditional social determinants of health.
Abstract
In the modern era, the use of technology can substantially impact care access. Despite the extent of its influence on several chronic medical conditions related to the heart, lungs, and others, the relationship between one’s access to digital resources and oncologic conditions has been seldom investigated in select pathologies among gastrointestinal and head-neck regions. However, studies on the influence of this “digital inequity” on other cancers pertaining to nasal and paranasal sinus cancer (NPSC) have yet to be performed. This remains in stark contrast to the extent of large data approaches assessing the impact of traditional social determinants/drivers of health (SDoH), such as factors related to one’s socioeconomic status, minoritized race or ethnicity, and housing-transportation status, on prognostic and treatment outcomes. This study aims to use the Digital Inequity Index…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHead and Neck Cancer Studies · Social Media in Health Education · Tracheal and airway disorders
