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- W4285992720 abstract "Foreign-born populations in the US face poorer health outcomes when compared to US-born populations. Limited data describe skin cancer prevalence among foreign-born individuals; such data may inform preventative practices. We compared skin cancer prevalence among foreign-born and US-born adults of the same race/ethnicity using National Health Interview Survey data from 2000-2018. Skin cancer prevalence estimates were compared between US versus foreign-born using multivariable logistic regression adjusted for age, sex, demographics, and health behaviors. Among foreign-born participants, prevalence was compared by markers of acculturation (citizenship status, years in US, survey interview language) using multivariable logistic regression adjusted for age, sex, demographics, health behavior, and global region of birth. The study included 363,138 Non-Hispanic Whites (4.91% foreign born), 94,507 Hispanics (59.16%), and 26,906 Asians (78.33%). Skin cancer prevalence was lower among foreign-born Non-Hispanic Whites (weighted prevalence; 95% CI, 2.49%; 2.21-2.79) than US-born Whites (4.08%; 3.99-4.17), foreign-born Hispanics (0.27%; 0.22-0.32) than US-born Hispanics (0.44%; 0.36-0.53), and foreign-born Asians (0.16%; 0.10-0.25) than US-born Asians (0.85%; 0.61-1.18). Skin cancer prevalence among Non-Hispanic Blacks could not be reliably estimated due to low absolute numbers. Differences in skin cancer prevalence by foreign-born status remained significant in multivariable models across all races. Among foreign-born participants, non-US citizens had lower odds of skin cancer (0.32; 0.16-0.61). Study limitations included survey administration in predominantly English and Spanish and potential recall bias. Foreign-born individuals have lower skin cancer prevalence when compared to US-born individuals of the same race. Acculturation is positively associated with higher odds of skin cancer. Skin cancer in US-born individuals and highly acculturated immigrants warrants focused public health interventions and nuanced clinical counseling." @default.
- W4285992720 created "2022-07-21" @default.
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- W4285992720 date "2022-08-01" @default.
- W4285992720 modified "2023-09-28" @default.
- W4285992720 title "211 Skin cancer prevalence among foreign-born people in the US from 2000-2018" @default.
- W4285992720 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jid.2022.05.218" @default.
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