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Oncologists agree that there are many factors that influence whether a patient is screened for breast, prostate and cervical cancer, or whether symptoms of cancers that don't have proven screening methods, like bladder or pancreatic cancer, will be detected before the disease spreads—not just insurance status, but awareness, access to a primary-care physician and patients' perceptions of doctors and hospitals.

Dr. Cary Gross, an associate professor of medicine at Yale School of Medicine, recently coauthored a study in the journal Cancer that examined data from 1992 to 2002 and found that, throughout that period, African-American patients were significantly less likely than white patients to receive therapy for cancers of the lung, breast, colon and prostate regardless of the stage of their cancer. He says that disparities persisted even after the researchers accounted for the socioeconomic status of the patients, the presence of other chronic conditions, and whether or not they had seen doctors prior to the cancer diagnosis. "So there must be something else," he says. He and his colleagues are now sifting through the data to try and identify specific reasons that might explain why the disparities in cancer care have persisted. He too suspects that proximity to specialists and high-quality care plays a part, along with other factors that are even more race-specific, like communication or cultural barriers between patients and doctors and patient distrust of the health system because of prior experiences. "Ethnic minorities tend to be less empowered so they're more reluctant to go see a physician, especially if they have a bad diagnosis," says Harvard's Lathan. "There's this feeling of: what are they going to be able to do for me?"

Lois Ramondetta, an associate professor of gynecologic oncology at the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston who practices at a county hospital that serves a largely Hispanic and uninsured population, says many patients there arrive with late-stage cervical cancer. Rarely have they had a Pap smear, an effective screening method recommended at least every two to three years at a minimum. Her patients are often unaware of the test's importance, she says, and they don't have a regular Ob-Gyn. Education plays a role, she adds, but so do support systems. Sometimes the obstacle to a screening test and early cancer diagnosis can be as simple, and as maddening, as the inability to find childcare or to leave work in order to attend an appointment. "It is incredibly frustrating," says Ramondetta. "And it's very sad when you see people come in with an advanced disease and you know that didn't have to happen."

Patrick Maguire, a radiation oncologist with the New Hanover Radiation Oncology Center in Wilmington, N.C., which was awarded a grant from the National Cancer Institute to study racial barriers to cancer care, says they too have identified "multiple obstacles." Nearly one quarter of the population in the region served by the center is African-American, and the median income is lower than the national average. "Clearly one barrier is economic," he says, "but there are also transportation issues or occasionally there are patients whose cultural or religious beliefs, in my opinion, hinder their care. We'll see patients who come in with advanced cancer who says they're waiting for the Lord to heal them."

It may be impossible to convince those patients that early medical intervention may be more effective than prayer alone, but Maguire is trying to reach out to populations who may simply lack the awareness, the transportation, or the trust to seek regular medical care. His oncology center is using some of the NCI grant to hire women from the community to do outreach—spreading the word about the importance of mammograms, for example, in detecting breast cancer—and to help patients who are distrustful or overwhelmed to navigate the health-care system. They're also compiling the data they've been gathering on specific issues that prevent cancer patients from getting diagnosed, or seeking care, earlier, and are planning to publish their findings, along with other sites that received NCI grants.

Maguire acknowledges that because the obstacles can be so varied, and specific to certain regions or populations, there is still a great distance to cover before oncologists are able to overcome the disparities in cancer care. But he's hopeful that the growing body of research, and awareness that accompanies it, is starting to close the gap. "It is hard trying to sort it all out," he acknowledges. "But if we can knock down one obstacle at a time, we're still making progress."

© 2008

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: azlizird @ 05/26/2008 12:08:00 AM

    Maybe Kennedy can share his excees treatment with the rest of us, Ya think!!!!!!!?????

  • Posted By: Naturalcenter @ 04/22/2008 12:35:54 PM

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  • Posted By: Naturalcenter @ 04/22/2008 12:35:44 PM

    Did you neglect the miracle of the vegetable used for our daily use.
    Vegetable soup can cure the cancer in the remote mauntainous town in China.
    They had used the natural_pure vegetable for the cure of the tumor in the body.
    The first is how to eliminate the pains.
    Best regards,
    Yoon Ki Lee

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