Thursday, May 14, 2015

Unemployment linked to rise in prostate cancer deaths

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2015-05/e-ul051415.php

Public Release: 14-May-2015
ecancermedicalscience

The knock-on effects of the economic downturn have been explored in economy and psychology. Now researchers are examining the effects of unemployment on an even darker subject - cancer mortality.

One would think that dealing with unemployment was challenge enough. But according to the latest research published in ecancermedicalscience, rises in unemployment are associated with significant increases in prostate cancer mortality.

This is the first study that has systematically explored the consequences that changes in unemployment - in particular the Great Recession of the late 2000s - have had in generating excess deaths due to a treatable disease such as prostate cancer.

The effect continued for at least five years after a 1% rise in unemployment, says study author Johnathan Watkins of King's College London, London, UK.

But was the effect simply due to the fact that the unemployed patients might belong to social groups that are more likely to experience prostate cancer mortality?

Apparently not. The trend continued even after researchers controlled the effect of competing forces such as economic factors, infrastructure, hospital resources, and health care spending.

The researchers are keeping an open mind about the exact causes of this correlation - it's likely due to a cohort of factors influenced by macroeconomics, such as changes in nutrition, societal challenges, and possibly even psychological outcomes.

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