Resisting ethnic inequities in advanced breast cancer: A call to action
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Authors
Kereama-Royal, Irene
Jones, S.
Lavelle Wijohn, E.
Doole, C.
Burgess, E.
Came, H.
Jones, S.
Lavelle Wijohn, E.
Doole, C.
Burgess, E.
Came, H.
Author ORCID Profiles (clickable)
Degree
Grantor
Date
2019-12-13
Supervisors
Type
Journal Article
Ngā Upoko Tukutuku (Māori subject headings)
Keyword
Aotearoa
New Zealand
Māori women cancer patients
breast cancer
cancer patients
delivery of health care
women with cancer
New Zealand
Māori women cancer patients
breast cancer
cancer patients
delivery of health care
women with cancer
ANZSRC Field of Research Code (2020)
Citation
Kereama-Royal, I., Jones, S., Lavelle Wijohn, E., Doole, C, Burgess, E. & Came, H. (2019). Resisting ethnic inequities in advanced breast cancer: a call to action. New Zealand Medical Journal, Vol 132 No 1507, 83-89.
Abstract
Māori women with advanced breast cancer are less than half as likely as their Pākehā counterparts to reach the five-year survival mark. We argue that this inequity is unacceptable. We trace the inequity back to
i) inadequate screening and risk assessment,
ii) lack of support for patient navigation,
iii) failure to offer accessible state-of-the-art treatments, and
iv) delays in receiving life-prolonging care.
We posit that each of these factors is a site of institutional racism and privilege as they cause Māori women to experience significantly worse outcomes than non-Māori. In the active pursuit of justice, cancer survivors, women living with cancer and their supporters across the country have been engaging in passionate advocacy to address inequities. As the Ministry of Health develops a new cancer control plan, in this viewpoint opinion piece, we seek to amplify these distressing inequities and o er evidence-based recommendations to improve the quality of care and ultimately survival rates. Breast cancer inequities are modifiable. We recommend prioritising breast cancer screening and risk assessments for Māori women, reducing treatment delays, providing Māori-centered patient navigation, increasing funding for treatments and drugs to align with the OECD standard of care, and holding health providers accountable for ethnic inequities. We call on policy makers dra ing the new cancer control strategy, and those working across the cancer continuum, to take action to improve breast cancer outcomes so Māori women will gain valuable life-years.
Publisher
New Zealand Medical Association
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©NZMA
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