Breast Cancer: Early Detection and Prevention Strategies to Achieve Equity
A special issue of Cancers (ISSN 2072-6694). This special issue belongs to the section "Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 November 2022) | Viewed by 14568
Special Issue Editors
Interests: breast, cervical and colorectal cancer prevention and screening; follow-up of abnormal test results; treatment access; survivorship issues
Interests: health disparities; underserved Latinas; breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer prevention and screening; access to health care; breast cancer in low-resource countries; BRCA gene mutations
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Breast cancer is now the most common cancer among women worldwide, accounting for 12% of all new annual cases (WHO, 2021). The burden of breast cancer risk, incidence, and mortality, however, is not distributed equally among all populations. Certain population groups such as Black women, Latinas, Indigenous women, women who live in rural areas, and other groups who experience health disparities are more likely to die from breast cancer than other women. Reversing this trend requires attention to interventions promoting prevention and early detection strategies among disparate groups, as cancers prevented or detected early and treated appropriately dramatically increase the chances for survival. Many innovative and efficacious intervention strategies have been designed, tested, and even implemented to increase the uptake of prevention and early detection efforts to reduce disparities in breast cancer outcomes among populations who suffer from them. Such work is important to guide the path to equity in breast cancer outcomes. Hence, we seek to establish a compendium of successful and efficacious breast cancer prevention or early detection intervention and implementation projects among populations experiencing disparities in breast cancer outcomes.
The aim of this Special Issue of Cancers is to present studies that have tested successful interventions to increase the uptake of prevention and early detection strategies among populations that suffer from breast cancer disparities. Observational studies do not meet the requirements of this Special Issue.
Research areas may include (but are not limited to) the following related to breast cancer: interventions testing risk identification among women experiencing disparities; increasing uptake of genetic/counseling/testing; promoting the use of chemoprevention; diet/exercise/obesity interventions; screening/early detection interventions, such as testing new modalities and promoting mammography/MRI screening; assuring follow-up of abnormal screening test results.
In this Special Issue, original research articles and reviews are welcome.
We look forward to receiving your contributions.
Prof. Dr. Electra Diane Paskett
Prof. Dr. Beti Thompson
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- breast cancer
- mammography
- breast cancer disparities
- genetic testing
- genetic counseling
- chemoprevention
- obesity
- diet
- exercise
- abnormal follow-up
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