Māori women with advanced breast cancer are less than half as likely as their Pākehā counterparts to reach the five-year survival mark. We argue that this inequity is unacceptable. We trace the inequity back to i) inadequate screening and risk assessment, ii) lack of support for patient navigation, iii) failure to offer accessible state-of-the-art treatments, and iv) delays in receiving life-prolonging care. We posit that each of these factors is a site of institutional racism and privilege as they cause Māori women to experience significantly worse outcomes than non-Māori. In the active pursuit of justice, cancer survivors, women living with cancer and their supporters across the country have been engaging in passionate advocac...
BACKGROUND. African Americans (AA) have higher mortality from breast cancer compared with white Amer...
BACKGROUND: Breast cancer (BC) mortality is higher in African American women compared to white women...
Disparities in breast cancer mortality are explored through a complex set of political and economic ...
abstract: Breast cancer affects hundreds of thousands of women a year in the United States, and kill...
National and global efforts have led to significant improvements in breast health and diagnosis, glo...
Over the past 20 years, there has been an increasing racial disparity in breast cancer mortality (1)...
BACKGROUND: Although rates of survival for women with breast cancer have improved, the survival disp...
Racial/ethnic disparities in female breast cancer survival continue to persist in United States. How...
Introduction: Appropriate treatment disparity and delay in receipt of treatment are possible reasons...
Purpose: Reasons for the well-described disparity in outcomes between African American (AA) and non-...
This study aimed to explore the health care experiences of members of minority ethnic groups regardi...
Improvements in screening and treatment methods have resulted in a growing number of breast cancer s...
Race has an impact on breast cancer treatment and survival. Non-Hispanic white women are more likely...
Background: During 2001 to 2005, 1-year breast cancer survival was low in ethnically diverse East Lo...
More people in the UK are living with cancer than ever before. With an increasingly ethnically diver...
BACKGROUND. African Americans (AA) have higher mortality from breast cancer compared with white Amer...
BACKGROUND: Breast cancer (BC) mortality is higher in African American women compared to white women...
Disparities in breast cancer mortality are explored through a complex set of political and economic ...
abstract: Breast cancer affects hundreds of thousands of women a year in the United States, and kill...
National and global efforts have led to significant improvements in breast health and diagnosis, glo...
Over the past 20 years, there has been an increasing racial disparity in breast cancer mortality (1)...
BACKGROUND: Although rates of survival for women with breast cancer have improved, the survival disp...
Racial/ethnic disparities in female breast cancer survival continue to persist in United States. How...
Introduction: Appropriate treatment disparity and delay in receipt of treatment are possible reasons...
Purpose: Reasons for the well-described disparity in outcomes between African American (AA) and non-...
This study aimed to explore the health care experiences of members of minority ethnic groups regardi...
Improvements in screening and treatment methods have resulted in a growing number of breast cancer s...
Race has an impact on breast cancer treatment and survival. Non-Hispanic white women are more likely...
Background: During 2001 to 2005, 1-year breast cancer survival was low in ethnically diverse East Lo...
More people in the UK are living with cancer than ever before. With an increasingly ethnically diver...
BACKGROUND. African Americans (AA) have higher mortality from breast cancer compared with white Amer...
BACKGROUND: Breast cancer (BC) mortality is higher in African American women compared to white women...
Disparities in breast cancer mortality are explored through a complex set of political and economic ...