Colorectal Cancer Screening and Access to Healthcare in New York City Taxi Drivers

被引:0
|
作者
Rosario Costas-Muñiz
Nicole Roberts
Bharat Narang
Rehan Mehmood
Sudha Acharya
Abraham Aragones
Jennifer Leng
Francesca Gany
机构
[1] Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center,Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences
[2] Immigrant Health & Cancer Disparities Service,undefined
[3] South Asian Council for Social Services,undefined
关键词
Colonoscopy; Adherence; Cancer screening; Immigrant health;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study examined differences in colorectal cancer screening across sociodemographic, migration, occupational, and health-related factors in a sample of male taxi drivers. Male drivers eligible for colorectal cancer screening (CRCS) (≥ 50 years old) were recruited in 55 community-based health fairs conducted during November 2015 to February 2017 in 16 taxi garages or community locations located in Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan and Bronx. Participants completed a survey that included sociodemographic, migration, occupational, health-related, and cancer screening practices. For this study 33 questions were analyzed. The sample consisted of 137 male drivers, 27% of them had undergone CRCS. Occupation-related factors, including night shifts and driving high numbers of weekly hours, were associated with lower CRCS rates; having a family history of cancer, health insurance, a regular source of primary care, and a routine check-up in the last year, were associated with higher CRCS rates. The findings suggest that drivers with health insurance and better access to primary care are more likely to be up-to-date with CRCS. The results provide important information that can inform occupation-based public health interventions.
引用
收藏
页码:526 / 533
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Disparities in Colorectal Cancer Screening in New York City: An Analysis of the 2014 NYC Community Health Survey
    Rastogi, Neelesh
    Liang, Peter S.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2017, 112 : S131 - S132
  • [42] Analysis of taxi demand and supply in New York City: implications of recent taxi regulations
    Kamga, Camille
    Yazici, M. Anil
    Singhal, Abhishek
    TRANSPORTATION PLANNING AND TECHNOLOGY, 2015, 38 (06) : 601 - 625
  • [43] Taxi! A social history of the New York City cabdriver.
    Hamill, Pete
    NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW, 2007, : 19 - 19
  • [44] Spatiotemporal Pattern Analysis of Taxi Trips in New York City
    Hochmair, Hartwig H.
    TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH RECORD, 2016, (2542) : 45 - 56
  • [45] Big Data Computation of Taxi Movement in New York City
    Deri, Joya A.
    Franchetti, Franz
    Moura, Jose M. F.
    2016 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BIG DATA (BIG DATA), 2016, : 2616 - 2625
  • [46] Taxi! A social history of the New York City cabdriver.
    Augustyn, Frederick J., Jr.
    Hodges, Graham Russell Gao
    LIBRARY JOURNAL, 2007, 132 (06) : 102 - 102
  • [47] New York City Taxi Analysis with Graph Signal Processing
    Deri, Joya A.
    Moura, Jose M. F.
    2016 IEEE GLOBAL CONFERENCE ON SIGNAL AND INFORMATION PROCESSING (GLOBALSIP), 2016, : 1275 - 1279
  • [48] Social Capital Investment and Immigrant Economic Trajectories: A Case Study of Punjabi American Taxi Drivers in New York City
    Mitra, Diditi
    INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION, 2012, 50 (04) : 67 - 84
  • [49] Lurking in plain sight: Hypertension awareness and treatment among New York City taxi/for-hire vehicle drivers
    Narang, Bharat
    Mirpuri, Sheena
    Kim, Soo Young
    Jutagir, Devika R.
    Gany, Francesca
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL HYPERTENSION, 2020, 22 (06): : 962 - 969
  • [50] Disparities in colorectal cancer screening among South Asians in New York City: a cross-sectional study
    Wyatt, Laura C.
    Patel, Shilpa
    Kranick, Julie A.
    Raveis, Victoria H.
    Ravenell, Joseph E.
    Yi, Stella S.
    Kwon, Simona C.
    Islam, Nadia S.
    JOURNAL OF CANCER EDUCATION, 2022, 37 (05) : 1510 - 1518