Spatial Heterogeneity of Social Vulnerabilities Associated with Colorectal Cancer Screening Rates in California
Jinbo Niu, Joonhyeog Park, Tamara Cadet

TL;DR
This study explores how social vulnerabilities vary across California and affect colorectal cancer screening rates, highlighting the need for localized interventions.
Contribution
The study identifies spatially varying social vulnerability factors influencing CRC screening rates in California, emphasizing localized disparities.
Findings
Educational attainment and limited English proficiency showed strong spatial heterogeneity in their association with CRC screening rates.
The percentage of adults over 65 had a consistently positive association with screening rates across regions.
Localized interventions are needed to address CRC screening disparities in California.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States, and the American Cancer Society recommends CRC screening beginning at age 45. Despite its economic prosperity, California in 2022 reported the lowest CRC screening rates among adults aged 45 to 75 in the U.S. This counterintuitive phenomenon raises concerns about which social vulnerability factors are associated with the low rate in California. However, prior research on social vulnerability has largely focused on national-level patterns, with limited attention to California-specific disparities and the spatial heterogeneity of social vulnerability factors associated with CRC screening rates. This study aimed to explore the spatial heterogeneity of social vulnerabilities influencing CRC screening rates in California by analyzing the California tract-level CRC screening rate from the CDC…
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Taxonomy
TopicsColorectal Cancer Screening and Detection · Global Cancer Incidence and Screening · Data-Driven Disease Surveillance
