1. Prevalence of Poverty and Hunger at Cancer Diagnosis and Its Association with Malnutrition and Overall Survival in South Africa.
- Author
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Schoeman, Judy, Kellerman, Ilde-Marié, Ndlovu, Sandile, Ladas, Elena J, Rogers, Paul C, Lombard, Carl J, Büchner, Ané, Reynders, David T, Naidu, Gita, Rowe, Biance, du Plessis, Jan, Herholdt, Mariechen, Thomas, Karla, Vanemmenes, Barry, Mathews, Rema, Omar, Fareed, Uys, Ronelle, and Kruger, Mariana
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of tumors in children ,PARENT attitudes ,CAREGIVER attitudes ,STATURE ,STATISTICS ,BODY weight ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FOOD security ,HUNGER ,REGRESSION analysis ,TUMORS in children ,RISK assessment ,MALNUTRITION ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,POVERTY ,TERMINATION of treatment ,ODDS ratio ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,CANCER patient medical care ,NUTRITIONAL status ,GROWTH disorders ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Many South African children live in poverty and food insecurity; therefore, malnutrition within the context of childhood cancer should be examined. Parents/caregivers completed the Poverty-Assessment Tool (divided into poverty risk groups) and the Household Hunger Scale questionnaire in five pediatric oncology units. Height, weight, and mid-upper arm circumference assessments classified malnutrition. Regression analysis evaluated the association of poverty and food insecurity with nutritional status, abandonment of treatment, and one-year overall survival (OS). Nearly a third (27.8%) of 320 patients had a high poverty risk, associated significantly with stunting (p = 0.009), food insecurity (p < 0.001) and residential province (p < 0.001) (multinomial regression). Stunting was independently and significantly associated with one-year OS on univariate analysis. The hunger scale was significant predictor of OS, as patients living with hunger at home had an increased odds ratio for treatment abandonment (OR 4.5; 95% CI 1.0; 19.4; p = 0.045) and hazard for death (HR 3.2; 95% CI 1.02, 9.9; p = 0.046) compared to those with food security. Evaluating sociodemographic factors such as poverty and food insecurity at diagnosis is essential among South African children to identify at-risk children and implement adequate nutritional support during cancer treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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