Influence of structural racism on cancer health disparities: Tailoring measures relevant to multiple myeloma

Author:

Roland Hugh B.12ORCID,McGuire Cydney M.3,Baskin Monica L.4,Esposito Michael H.5,Baker Elizabeth6,Brown Elizabeth E.27

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Health Sciences University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Public Health Birmingham Alabama USA

2. Department of Pathology University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham Alabama USA

3. Paul H. O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs Indiana University Bloomington Indiana USA

4. Department of Medicine University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

5. Department of Sociology University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

6. Department of Sociology University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham Alabama USA

7. O’Neal Comprehensive Cancer Center University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham Alabama USA

Abstract

AbstractThis commentary highlights a need for comprehensive measures of structural racism tailored to cancer health disparities, in particular Black–White disparities in multiple myeloma (MM). Recent political and social calls and advances in the ability to quantitate structural racism have led to rapidly growing research on the health consequences of structural racism. However, to date, most studies have used unidimensional measures of structural racism that do not capture cumulative influences or enable the identification of factors most responsible for driving disparities. Furthermore, measures may not reflect aspects of structural racism most relevant to underlying disease processes and risks. This study proposes a multifaceted approach to measuring structural racism relevant to MM that includes comprehensive, disease‐ and at‐risk population‐tailored social and environmental data and biomarkers of susceptibility and progression related to underlying biological changes associated with structural racism. Such novel measures of structural racism may improve the ability to assess the influence of structural racism on cancer health disparities, which may advance understanding of disease etiology and differences observed by racialized groups.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Reference85 articles.

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