Women's Health Weekly
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University of California - Los Angeles
Study quantifies racial disparities in cancer mortality rates between blacks and whites
April 9th, 2009
African Americans have a shorter life expectancy than whites, and cancer plays a major role in this disparity. African Americans are more prone to get cancer; they tend to present at a later, deadlier stage; and they have poorer survival rates after diagnosis. But to what extent are each of these three factors responsible for the disparity in cancer mortality' A new UCLA study, published in Journal of General Internal Medicine Feb. 18, answers that question, finding that for most types of cancer, the disparity in mortality is almost entirely due to the fact that African Americans are more likely to get cancer in the first place. Their stage at presentation and survival...
Source: Women's Health Weekly (2009-04-09)
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