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Widening Social Inequalities in Cancer Mortality of Children Under 5 Years in Korea

J Korean Med Sci. 2023 Jan 9;38(2):e20. doi: 10.3346/jkms.2023.38.e20.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: To investigate the effect of parental social class on cancer mortality in children under 5 in Korea, two birth cohorts were constructed by linking national birth data to under-5 death data from the Statistics Korea for 1995-1999 (3,323,613 births) and 2010-2014 (2,297,876 births).

METHODS: The Cox proportional hazards model adjusted for covariates was used in this study.

RESULTS: Social inequalities of under-5 cancer mortality risk in paternal education and paternal employment status were greater in 2010-2014 than in 1995-1999. The gap of hazard ratio (HR) of under-5 cancer mortality between lower (high school or below) and higher (university or higher) paternal education increased from 1.23 (95% confidence interval, 1.041.46) in 1995-1999 to 1.45 (1.11-1.97) in 2010-2014; the gap of HR between parents engaged in manual work and non-manual work increased from 1.32 (1.12-1.56) in 1995-1999 to 1.45 (1.12-1.89) in 2010-2014 for fathers, and from 1.18 (0.7-1.98) to 1.69 (1.03-2.79) for mothers. When the parental social class was lower, the risk of under-5 cancer mortality was higher in not only adverse but normal births.

CONCLUSION: Social inequalities must be addressed to reduce the disparity in cancer mortality of children under 5 years old.

PMID:36625176 | DOI:10.3346/jkms.2023.38.e20

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