Racial disparities in breast cancer mortality have been widely documented for several decades and persist despite advances in receipt of mammography across racial groups. This persistence leads to questions about the roles of biological, social, and health system determinants of poor outcomes. Cancer outcomes are a function not only of innate biological factors but also of modifiable characteristics of individual behavior and decision making as well as characteristics of patient-health system interaction and the health system itself. Attempts to explain persistent racial disparities have mostly been limited to discussion of differences in insurance coverage, socioeconomic status, tumor stage at diagnosis, comorbidity, and molecular subtype ...
BACKGROUND: Although rates of survival for women with breast cancer have improved, the survival disp...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94110/1/Disparities in breast cancer ca...
Purpose: Reasons for the well-described disparity in outcomes between African American (AA) and non-...
Racial disparities in breast cancer mortality have been widely documented for several decades and pe...
BACKGROUND. African Americans (AA) have higher mortality from breast cancer compared with white Ame...
Sizeable disparities exist in breast cancer outcomes, both between Black and White patients in the U...
Despite significant advances that have been made in breast cancer diagnosis and treatment, a disprop...
Objectives: To examine whether residential segregation is a mediator of racial/ ethnic disparities i...
Breast cancer incidence and mortality rates have declined in the US for the past 10-15 years, but th...
Objective: The impact of breast cancer is immense for all women, but the literature reveals an even ...
Background. African American women have a lower incidence of breast cancer than White women, but a h...
Abstract Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer worldwide and is one of t...
Context: Breast cancer is the most common cancer and the second leading cause of cancer death among...
Background: Despite the fact breast cancer mortality has declined in recent years, the mortality gap...
BACKGROUND: In the United States, a black-to-white disparity in age-standardized breast cancer morta...
BACKGROUND: Although rates of survival for women with breast cancer have improved, the survival disp...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94110/1/Disparities in breast cancer ca...
Purpose: Reasons for the well-described disparity in outcomes between African American (AA) and non-...
Racial disparities in breast cancer mortality have been widely documented for several decades and pe...
BACKGROUND. African Americans (AA) have higher mortality from breast cancer compared with white Ame...
Sizeable disparities exist in breast cancer outcomes, both between Black and White patients in the U...
Despite significant advances that have been made in breast cancer diagnosis and treatment, a disprop...
Objectives: To examine whether residential segregation is a mediator of racial/ ethnic disparities i...
Breast cancer incidence and mortality rates have declined in the US for the past 10-15 years, but th...
Objective: The impact of breast cancer is immense for all women, but the literature reveals an even ...
Background. African American women have a lower incidence of breast cancer than White women, but a h...
Abstract Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer worldwide and is one of t...
Context: Breast cancer is the most common cancer and the second leading cause of cancer death among...
Background: Despite the fact breast cancer mortality has declined in recent years, the mortality gap...
BACKGROUND: In the United States, a black-to-white disparity in age-standardized breast cancer morta...
BACKGROUND: Although rates of survival for women with breast cancer have improved, the survival disp...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94110/1/Disparities in breast cancer ca...
Purpose: Reasons for the well-described disparity in outcomes between African American (AA) and non-...