What are major factors in the "racial gap" in breast cancer care, if not income or insurance?
- 1 people answered
Edit Tags
Tags are used to find the best answers
You might also be interested in
Receptors are proteins in or on cells that can attach to certain substances in the blood. Normal breast cells and some breast cancer cells have receptors that attach to the hormones estrogen and progesterone, and depend on these hormones to grow. The breast tissue estrogen receptor is both genetic ....
A new treatment for breast cancer has completely eradicated tumours in just 11 days. A team of researchers in the UK claims the new two-pronged technique could spare thousands of women from gruelling chemotherapy. Doctors combined two existing cancer drugs - Tyverb and Herceptin – and gave them t....
One can start driving after 6 weeks post-surgery to be on the safer side. If other additional treatments are going on, it is best to ask your doctor for such instructions.
Credihealth is not a medical practitioner and does not provide medical advice. You should consult your doctor or with a healthcare professional before starting any diet, exercise, supplementation or medication program. Know More
লেখা:Dr. Nitika Sharma - BDS
পর্যালোচনা করা হয়েছে:Dr. Rakesh Kumar - MBBS, MS
Nidii Berwal
The so-called racial gap in breast cancer care has long been suggested by researchers, with black and Hispanic women less likely to get recommended breast cancer treatments than white patients. Researchers claim financial factors such as economic and social class or access to insurance alone can't explain this "gap”. Even after accounting for those differences, racial disparities in breast cancer care can still be found. For hormone receptor testing there may not be such differences but the gap persists in other interventions. For instance, black women have lower odds of receiving recommended treatments: interventions like mastectomy or breast-conserving therapy or even chemotherapy. The sad part is, these disparities persist even after many studies accounted for insurance coverage and socioeconomic status. People often are quick to blame the so-called "racial gap" on income or insurance, but the fact that the gap exists independently of these factors clearly hints there are more "hidden" racial biases in our healthcare system.