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Barriers Driving Racial Disparities in Colorectal Cancer Screening in African Americans.

Pascale M WhiteSteven H Itzkowitz
Published in: Current gastroenterology reports (2020)
At its foundation are patient barriers, which are further compounded by physician-related barriers and the idiosyncrasies of the healthcare system. Interventions to address the barriers include patient outreach, provider education, and healthcare legislation addressing financial barriers. Recent research has focused on factors predicting intentions to undergo colorectal cancer screening. Underlying all of the barriers is the systemic racism that affects and influences the healthcare system as much as all other institutions and contributes to inequities in the delivery of effective cancer prevention efforts. Perpetual disparities in CRC screening within the African American community are due to multifactorial barriers from the individual patient to provider and healthcare system and societal influences. An awareness of the behavioral and systemic factors that affect African Americans must underpin efforts to reach full equity in delivering CRC screening to this often medically underserved segment of our society.
Keyphrases
  • colorectal cancer screening
  • healthcare
  • african american
  • primary care
  • quality improvement
  • mental health
  • public health
  • papillary thyroid
  • affordable care act
  • lymph node metastasis
  • squamous cell