Has the National Cancer Screening Program reduced income inequalities in screening attendance in South Korea?

scientific article published on 3 September 2015

Has the National Cancer Screening Program reduced income inequalities in screening attendance in South Korea? is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P6179Dimensions Publication ID1034375525
P356DOI10.1007/S10552-015-0655-8
P698PubMed publication ID26335263

P50authorSankaran V. SubramanianQ67343781
P2093author name stringSujin Kim
Soonman Kwon
P2860cites workThe lack of paid sick leave as a barrier to cancer screening and medical care-seeking: results from the National Health Interview SurveyQ28388260
Socioeconomic and racial/ethnic differences in the discussion of cancer screening: "between-" versus "within-" physician differencesQ30479968
Predictors of endoscopic colorectal cancer screening over time in 11 statesQ33716060
Implicit value judgments in the measurement of health inequalitiesQ33922593
A systematic assessment of benefits and risks to guide breast cancer screening decisionsQ34413193
Socioeconomic and racial patterns of colorectal cancer screening among Medicare enrollees in 2000 to 2005.Q34479489
Socioeconomic disparity in cervical cancer screening among Korean women: 1998-2010.Q34761680
Cancer statistics in Korea: incidence, mortality, survival, and prevalence in 2012.Q35430015
Colorectal cancer screening and treatment: review of outcomes researchQ35927700
Use of relative and absolute effect measures in reporting health inequalities: structured reviewQ36204788
Socioeconomic and physician supply determinants of racial disparities in colorectal cancer screeningQ36226346
Origins of socio-economic inequalities in cancer survival: a review.Q36249509
Trends in Cancer Screening Rates among Korean Men and Women: Results from the Korean National Cancer Screening Survey, 2004-2012Q37011148
Does a national screening programme reduce socioeconomic inequalities in mammography use?Q37402464
Inequalities in cancer incidence and mortality across income groups and policy implications in South Korea.Q38504014
Horizontal equity in health care utilization evidence from three high-income Asian economiesQ39770374
Barriers to cervical cancer screening attendance in England: a population-based surveyQ39912037
Trends in colorectal cancer screening with home-based fecal occult blood tests in adults ages 50 to 64 years, 2000-2008.Q43493798
Socio-economic disparities in behavioural risk factors for cancer and use of cancer screening services in Korean adults aged 30 years and older: the Third Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2005 (KNHANES III).Q44902170
Examination of population-wide trends in barriers to cancer screening from a diffusion of innovation perspective (1987-2000).Q47216557
Decomposing income-related inequality in cervical screening in 67 countriesQ47320784
Colorectal cancer, screening and survival: the influence of socio-economic deprivationQ47591725
Does removal of out-of-pocket costs for cervical and breast cancer screening work? A quasi-experimental study to evaluate the impact on attendance, attendance inequality and average cost per uptake of a Japanese government interventionQ48300781
Cancer-related information seeking: hints from the 2003 Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS).Q50112086
Correlates of repeat and recent mammography for women ages 45 to 75 in the 2002 to 2003 Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS 2003).Q50187420
Trends and inequities in colorectal cancer screening participation in Ontario, Canada, 2005-2011.Q50852412
Survival for eight major cancers and all cancers combined for European adults diagnosed in 1995–99: results of the EUROCARE-4 studyQ57192409
Evolution of Inequalities in Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening in Barcelona: Population Surveys 1992, 2001, and 2006Q57535086
P433issue11
P921main subjectSouth KoreaQ884
P304page(s)1617-1625
P577publication date2015-09-03
P1433published inCancer Causes & ControlQ325957
P1476titleHas the National Cancer Screening Program reduced income inequalities in screening attendance in South Korea?
P478volume26