Survival Disparities in Endometrial Cancer Persist Despite Equal Access to Care
Factors other than access may affect differences in survival, according to researchers.
Factors other than access may affect differences in survival, according to researchers.
The disparity is due to the greater prevalence of fibroids and nonendometrioid histologic type in Black women, according to researchers.
Hispanics have higher MM-related in-hospital mortality; recent decline seen in in-hospital mortality for all except NH-Blacks.
Black men less likely than White men to undergo prostatectomy despite similar COVID-19 risk factors, biopsy Gleason grade groups.
Living in rural counties and living farther from reporting hospital detrimental for adolescents and young adults with cancer.
The study showed differences by cancer type and race/ethnicity.
The current scientific evidence may not be generalizable to underrepresented groups.
Although nearly all metrics improved for racial-ethnic minorities, recent breast cancer-related mortality in Florida still higher in Black women.
72 percent of low-income, uninsured, or publicly insured women perceived financial barriers to screening.
Among patients with high-risk pTa bladder cancer, female sex was significantly associated with a higher risk for stage progression compared with male sex.