Reading time: 5 minutes Shan Grewal Henrietta Lacks was an African American woman born in 1920 in Virginia. In 1951, she experienced symptoms thousands of women experience today, a knot in her womb, abnormal uterine bleeding, and pelvic pain. She was sent to Johns Hopkins Hospital, where she was diagnosed with cervical cancer, now known... Continue Reading →
Integrating Race, Ethnicity, and Now Ancestry Into Cancer Research—Why Does it Matter?
Reading time: 4 minutes Aileen I Fernandez Cancer health disparities are prevalent in the United States and are defined as “adverse differences between certain population groups in cancer measures”. It is well known that there are variations in cancer burden associated with racial/ethnic identity and that this is due to many factors. Among these are... Continue Reading →
Closing the Gap: At-Home Cancer Tests Reduce Health Disparities in Cervical Cancer
Estimated reading time: 6 minutes Sara Musetti It is shocking to absolutely no one that there are large disparities in health care outcomes associated with socioeconomic status. As Morgan McSweeney recently wrote for OncoBites, melanoma patients on Medicaid or without access to health insurance wait longer for doctor’s visits and have poorer outcomes than patients... Continue Reading →
