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September 18, 2024

"County-level jail and state-level prison incarceration and cancer mortality in the United States"

The title of this post is the title of this intriguing new article from multiple authors just published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Here is its abstract:

This study examined the association of county-level jail and state-level prison incarceration rates and cancer mortality rates in the United States.  Incarceration rates (1995-2018) were sourced from national data and categorized into quartiles.  County- and state-level mortality rates (2000-2019) with invasive cancer as the underlying cause of death were obtained from the National Vital Statistics System.  Compared with the first quartile (lowest incarceration rate), the second, third, and fourth quartiles (highest incarceration rate) of county-level jail incarceration rate were associated with 1.3%, 2.3%, and 3.9% higher county-level cancer mortality rates, respectively, in adjusted analyses.  Compared with the first quartile, the second, third, and fourth quartiles of state-level prison incarceration rate were associated with 1.7%, 2.5%, and 3.9% higher state-level cancer mortality rates, respectively.  Associations were more pronounced for liver and lung cancers.  Addressing adverse effects of mass incarceration may potentially improve cancer outcomes in affected communities.

September 18, 2024 at 09:08 AM | Permalink

Comments

A poster child for correlation is not causation?

Posted by: ohwilleke | Sep 18, 2024 8:16:16 PM

OMG, Doug.

If your student provided such data, I sure hope you would fail him.

Yet, you call it “intriguing?”

Here is what I find intriguing. That it it is not obvious to everyone that criminals live unhealthy lifestyles which promote cancer and often have a spotty at best medical history. Often, prison is the only time they have ever seen a doctor regularly or at all.

Posted by: TarlsQtr | Sep 19, 2024 2:12:34 AM

Have you read the paper, Tarls? The discussed possible connections to health-care access intrigued me, as did data associating incarceration and cancer mortality for various different cancers at the community level. Your mileage may vary.

Posted by: Doug B | Sep 19, 2024 8:19:04 AM

Weird, but it’s saying I have to wait a year to read for free.

Posted by: TarlsQtr | Sep 19, 2024 3:48:22 PM

Tarls: so you graded the paper without reading it? That's bad form in the teaching world.

I have institutional access via Oxford, but the sad story of Aaron Swartz makes me chary about posting stuff from behind paywalls.

Posted by: Doug B | Sep 19, 2024 4:56:05 PM

I’m not a teacher.

I have institutional access too, but for some reason this one is not included. First time it has happened.

Posted by: TarlsQtr | Sep 19, 2024 9:43:36 PM

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