Accountability for Cancer Care through Undoing Racism and Equity (ACCURE) is a systems-change intervention addressing disparities in treatment initiation and completion and outcomes for early stage Black and White breast and lung cancer patients. Using a community-based participatory research approach, ACCURE is guided by a diverse partnership involving academic researchers, a non-profit community-based organization, its affiliated broader-based community coalition, and providers and staff from two cancer centers
Although much attention has been paid to health disparities in the past decades, interventions to am...
Black women have the highest death rate from breast cancer and a higher chance of developing breast ...
Background: Study populations in clinical research must reflect US changing demographics, especially...
Background: As medical and public health professional organizations call on researchers and policy m...
Background. Black patients in the U.S. receive fewer cancer treatment cycles than White patients on ...
Disproportionate and persistent inequities in quality of healthcare have been observed among persons...
With growing interest in the CBPR approach to cancer health disparities research, mechanisms are nee...
We describe reach, partnerships, products, benefits, and lessons learned of the 25 Community Network...
Community mobilization and collaboration among diverse partners are vital components of the effort t...
Although patterns of African American and white women breast cancer incidence and mortality in St. L...
Given the recent advances in cancer treatment, cancer disparity between whites and African-Americans...
BACKGROUND: Racial and socioeconomic disparities in breast cancer mortality persist. In Boston, MA, ...
Health disparities persist across the cancer care continuum. Patient navigator (PN) and community he...
Although patterns of African American and white women breast cancer incidence and mortality in St. L...
African Americans in the United States suffer disproportionately from cancer, having the highest mor...
Although much attention has been paid to health disparities in the past decades, interventions to am...
Black women have the highest death rate from breast cancer and a higher chance of developing breast ...
Background: Study populations in clinical research must reflect US changing demographics, especially...
Background: As medical and public health professional organizations call on researchers and policy m...
Background. Black patients in the U.S. receive fewer cancer treatment cycles than White patients on ...
Disproportionate and persistent inequities in quality of healthcare have been observed among persons...
With growing interest in the CBPR approach to cancer health disparities research, mechanisms are nee...
We describe reach, partnerships, products, benefits, and lessons learned of the 25 Community Network...
Community mobilization and collaboration among diverse partners are vital components of the effort t...
Although patterns of African American and white women breast cancer incidence and mortality in St. L...
Given the recent advances in cancer treatment, cancer disparity between whites and African-Americans...
BACKGROUND: Racial and socioeconomic disparities in breast cancer mortality persist. In Boston, MA, ...
Health disparities persist across the cancer care continuum. Patient navigator (PN) and community he...
Although patterns of African American and white women breast cancer incidence and mortality in St. L...
African Americans in the United States suffer disproportionately from cancer, having the highest mor...
Although much attention has been paid to health disparities in the past decades, interventions to am...
Black women have the highest death rate from breast cancer and a higher chance of developing breast ...
Background: Study populations in clinical research must reflect US changing demographics, especially...