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Hawai'i's multiethnic adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancer: are their health behavior risks similar to state and national samples?

Authors :
Randal K, Wada
Darryl W, Glaser
Erin O'Carroll, Bantum
Trina, Orimoto
Alana D, Steffen
Jennifer L, Elia
Cheryl L, Albright
Source :
Hawai'i journal of medicinepublic health : a journal of Asia Pacific MedicinePublic Health. 72(11)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Due to toxicities associated with their malignancies and treatments, adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancer (AYASCC) are at high risk for developing chronic diseases. This can be compounded by a greater prevalence of unhealthy behaviors relative to similarly aged non-cancer peers. Disparities in health behaviors have been noted for Black and Hispanic AYASCC, but data on Asian American (AA) or Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander (NHOPI) minorities are lacking. The purpose of this study was to help bridge these information gaps by gathering data from Hawai‘i AA and NHOPI AYSCC. Telephone surveys were used to collect health behavior data from survivors 13–24 years of age (N=64); 55% of the sample was female, 77% AA or NHOPI, 63% leukemia/lymphoma survivors, and 32% overweight/obese. These were compared to state/national survey data for similarly aged individuals (Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System data for 13–17 year olds, and Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System data for 18–24 year olds). While Hawai‘i AYASCC had significantly lower rates of tobacco/alcohol use, a higher proportion did not eat five fruits/vegetables a day (96%) compared to state (83%) and national (78%) samples (P < .001). Although many met age-specific physical activity recommendations, 44% of

Details

ISSN :
21658242
Volume :
72
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hawai'i journal of medicinepublic health : a journal of Asia Pacific MedicinePublic Health
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........b1b4b6c6f448e236f54240c7737030e9