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Do geodemographic typologies explain variations in uptake in colorectal cancer screening? An assessment using routine screening data in the south of England

Do geodemographic typologies explain variations in uptake in colorectal cancer screening? An assessment using routine screening data in the south of England
Do geodemographic typologies explain variations in uptake in colorectal cancer screening? An assessment using routine screening data in the south of England
Background: Uptake of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening in UK is less than 60%. Geodemographic typologies are useful in describing patterns of individual preventive health behaviour but little is known of their value in assessing uptake of CRC screening, or how this compares to traditional measures of area deprivation.

Methods: We used data on CRC screening uptake in the South Central, South-East Coast and South-West England National Health Service regions in multilevel logistic regression to describe the effects of individual composition and contextual factors (area deprivation and geodemographic segments) on non-response to screening invitation. The relative impact of geodemographic segmentation and the index of multiple deprivation (IMD) 2007 was compared. The potential population impact of a targeted increase in uptake in specific geodemographic segments was examined.

Results: About 88 891 eligible adults were invited to be screened from 2006 to 2008. Uptake rate was 57.3% (CI: 57.0–57.7) and was lower amongst younger persons, men, residents of more deprived areas and people in specific geodemographic segments. Age and gender were significant determinants of uptake and contextual factors explained an additional 3% of the variation. Geodemographic segmentation reduced this residual contextual variation in uptake more than the IMD 2007 (72% vs. 53% reduction). The three geodemographic types that best predicted non-response were characterized by both ethnic mix and a higher than average proportion of single pensioner households renting council properties. Achieving average uptake in the 2.3% of the study population in these geodemographic segments would only increase the total population uptake rate by 0.5% (57.3–57.8%).

Conclusion: Variation in the CRC screening uptake in Southern England is principally explained by characteristics of individuals but contextual factors also have a small but significant effect. This effect is captured in greater detail by geodemographic segmentation than by IMD 2007. This information could be used to inform the design of interventions aiming to improve uptake.
colorectal cancer, geodemographics, multilevel model, screening
1741-3842
572-81
Nnoaham, Kelechi E.
02df3312-b617-4068-acac-c2ecb207b242
Frater, Alison
cfa1dd53-75ab-4601-9f24-963e6de0e220
Roderick, Paul
dbb3cd11-4c51-4844-982b-0eb30ad5085a
Moon, Graham
68cffc4d-72c1-41e9-b1fa-1570c5f3a0b4
Halloran, Stephen
35194261-d780-4294-adbe-c0ca449172d4
Nnoaham, Kelechi E.
02df3312-b617-4068-acac-c2ecb207b242
Frater, Alison
cfa1dd53-75ab-4601-9f24-963e6de0e220
Roderick, Paul
dbb3cd11-4c51-4844-982b-0eb30ad5085a
Moon, Graham
68cffc4d-72c1-41e9-b1fa-1570c5f3a0b4
Halloran, Stephen
35194261-d780-4294-adbe-c0ca449172d4

Nnoaham, Kelechi E., Frater, Alison, Roderick, Paul, Moon, Graham and Halloran, Stephen (2010) Do geodemographic typologies explain variations in uptake in colorectal cancer screening? An assessment using routine screening data in the south of England. Journal of Public Health, 32 (4), 572-81. (doi:10.1093/pubmed/fdq025). (PMID:20410067)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Uptake of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening in UK is less than 60%. Geodemographic typologies are useful in describing patterns of individual preventive health behaviour but little is known of their value in assessing uptake of CRC screening, or how this compares to traditional measures of area deprivation.

Methods: We used data on CRC screening uptake in the South Central, South-East Coast and South-West England National Health Service regions in multilevel logistic regression to describe the effects of individual composition and contextual factors (area deprivation and geodemographic segments) on non-response to screening invitation. The relative impact of geodemographic segmentation and the index of multiple deprivation (IMD) 2007 was compared. The potential population impact of a targeted increase in uptake in specific geodemographic segments was examined.

Results: About 88 891 eligible adults were invited to be screened from 2006 to 2008. Uptake rate was 57.3% (CI: 57.0–57.7) and was lower amongst younger persons, men, residents of more deprived areas and people in specific geodemographic segments. Age and gender were significant determinants of uptake and contextual factors explained an additional 3% of the variation. Geodemographic segmentation reduced this residual contextual variation in uptake more than the IMD 2007 (72% vs. 53% reduction). The three geodemographic types that best predicted non-response were characterized by both ethnic mix and a higher than average proportion of single pensioner households renting council properties. Achieving average uptake in the 2.3% of the study population in these geodemographic segments would only increase the total population uptake rate by 0.5% (57.3–57.8%).

Conclusion: Variation in the CRC screening uptake in Southern England is principally explained by characteristics of individuals but contextual factors also have a small but significant effect. This effect is captured in greater detail by geodemographic segmentation than by IMD 2007. This information could be used to inform the design of interventions aiming to improve uptake.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 21 April 2010
Published date: December 2010
Keywords: colorectal cancer, geodemographics, multilevel model, screening
Organisations: Primary Care & Population Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 147657
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/147657
ISSN: 1741-3842
PURE UUID: a6ac2f3a-6f4a-47bc-940d-2ba57d46dca3
ORCID for Paul Roderick: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9475-6850
ORCID for Graham Moon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7256-8397

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Date deposited: 26 Apr 2010 10:30
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:52

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Contributors

Author: Kelechi E. Nnoaham
Author: Alison Frater
Author: Paul Roderick ORCID iD
Author: Graham Moon ORCID iD
Author: Stephen Halloran

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