Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Access to Telehealth Visits: Results From the COVID-19 and Cancer Outcomes Study
Black and Hispanic patients were more likely to have COVID-19 but less likely to have an increase in telehealth visits.
Black and Hispanic patients were more likely to have COVID-19 but less likely to have an increase in telehealth visits.
Even with an “exponential growth” of URM students, “faculty diversity would remain static well into the next 50 years.”
Historical trend of increased incidence in Blacks versus Whites disappeared in men, reversed in women.
It remains important to interrogate how structural discrimination influences the collection of patient-reported outcomes.
Frequencies of genomic alterations in current therapeutic targets similar for AFR, EUR men.
Time from diagnosis to definitive surgery is twice as long on average for black versus white patients.
Disparities for disease severity not seen at diagnosis, meaning postdiagnosis factors may affect outcome.
Racial and ethnic disparities have emerged among patients with cancer and COVID-19, with black and Hispanic populations experiencing disproportionality high mortality rates.
Living in culturally distinct neighborhoods was associated with improved survival outcomes among Latinas with breast cancer.
Regardless of birthplace, women who are Asian Pacific Islanders appear to have a higher risk of developing ovarian clear cell cancer compared with other ethnicities.