Patient Care Access News

Flagging Disparities Helps Locate Best Places for Cancer Screening Sites

After identifying both geographic and racial health disparities in breast cancer screening, researchers used USPSTF guidelines to locate new places for care sites.

researchers find new way to build cancer screening sites to fill health disparities

Source: Getty Images

By Sara Heath

- A new study from ChristianaCare’s Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute provides a roadmap for states to identify where they can put more breast cancer screening sites, a move the study authors said could help close racial health disparities in screening.

The study, published in Breast Cancer Research, also flagged regions within Delaware, where ChristianaCare operates, with the poorest patient access to breast cancer screening. In particular, the researchers found that rural regions and places with more Black residents have poorer access to Breast Imaging Centers of Excellence (BICOEs).

These findings come as healthcare experts work to better understand racial health disparities and the forces behind them. This particular study zeroed in on disparities in breast cancer screenings based on patient access to screening centers, which can then turn into disparities in health outcomes, according to the study’s senior author, Scott Siegel, PhD, MHCDS.