CancerisaleadingcauseofmorbidityandmortalityamongBlackwomenwithasubstantialburdendueto alcoholuse,smoking,andobesity.Despitegrowingevidenceoftheimportanceofearlylifeadverse experiencesonlong-termhealth,littleisknownabouthowchronicexposuretoadverseexperiencesacrossthe lifecourseinfluencescancerriskfactorsorriskbehaviorsamongBlackwomen.AfricanAmericanwomenare particularlyvulnerabletoahigherburdenofadverseexperiences.Duetohighlevelsofracialresidential segregationintheUnitedStates,AfricanAmericanwomenarealsomorelikelythanwomenofotherracesto liveinpoor,segregatedneighborhoodsirrespectiveofindividualeducationandincome.Neighborhoodcontext mayexacerbateeffectsofindividualleveladverseexperiences.Thereissomeevidencesuggestingthat modifyingtheneighborhoodmayattenuatetheeffectsofadverseexperiencesinearlylife.Wehypothesize thatadverseexperiencesacrossthelifecourse,compoundedbylivinginahighlyraciallysegregated neighborhoodinadulthoodwillresultinahigherriskofunhealthycopingbehaviors.UsingtheBlackWomen?s HealthStudy,acohortof59,000AfricanAmericanwomen(followedfrom1995-present),weaimto1)examine theassociationbetweentrajectoriesofadverseexperiencesinchildhood,adolescence,andadulthoodand adultalcoholuse,smoking,andbodysizeinAfricanAmericanwomenand2)determineiftheassociationof adverseexperienceswithadultalcoholuse,smoking,andbodysizeismodifiedbyneighborhoodracial segregationandsocioeconomicstatus. Thisstudywillfillacriticalgapinunderstandingtheinfluenceofearlylifeadverseexperiencesoncancerrisk factorsamongBlackwomen.Identifyingcriticalperiodsandinterveningearlierinthelifecoursewillyield greatergainsinreducingcancerdisparitiesinthispopulation.Theproposedresearchincorporatesseveral innovativeelements:1)Weareusingalarge,wellpowereddatasetthatwasexclusivedesignedtoelucidate thedriversofamultitudeofhealthoutcomesamongBlackwomen;?2)byincorporatingatrajectoryapproach weareabletoassesshowthetimingandcontinuityofadverseexperiencesinfluencehealthbehaviors;?3)By employingmultilevelmodelswecanexaminetheinfluenceofmultilevel(bothindividualandneighborhood) stressorsonhealthbehaviorsinthispopulation;?4)weareexaminingmultiplemeasuresofbodysizeincluding waist-to-hipratio(WHR)andBMI.Theinterdisciplinarytrainingenvironmentforthisproposalwillprovidethe applicantanopportunitytoenhancemethodologicalskills,buildresearchcompetency,andenhancecontent expertise,inordertobecomeanexpertintheintersectionofcancerandsocialepidemiology.

Public Health Relevance

CancerisaleadingcauseofmorbidityandmortalityamongBlackwomen.Despitegrowing evidenceoftheimportanceofearlylifeadverseexperiencesonlong-termcancer-relatedhealth behaviorsandcancerincidence,littleisknownaboutchronicexposuretoadverseexperiences acrossthelifecourseandtheadditionaleffectoflivinginhighlyraciallysegregated neighborhoodsamongAfricanAmericanwomen.Thisprojectistosupportdissertationresearch usingtheBlackWomen?sHealthStudytoevaluatehowadverseexperiencesinchildhoodor adulthoodinteractwithresidenceinraciallysegregatedneighborhoodstoshapecancerrisk behaviors.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Predoctoral Individual National Research Service Award (F31)
Project #
5F31CA239473-02
Application #
10049179
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Ogunbiyi, Peter
Project Start
2019-12-01
Project End
2021-11-30
Budget Start
2020-12-01
Budget End
2021-11-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2021
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California San Francisco
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
094878337
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94143