An innovative partnership to address breast cancer screening among vulnerable populations.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalEducation for health (Abingdon, England)
Year 2007
CONTEXT: Breast cancer is the most common non-skin malignancy among U.S. women. Vulnerable populations such as low-income women, racial/ethnic minorities, and the uninsured have lower rates of screening mammography use and bear a disproportionate burden of disease. OBJECTIVES: The Breast Cancer Education Project (BCEP) was created to address the needs of medically underserved women in Cook County through high-quality breast cancer screening, education and support. The BCEP also provides a service-learning opportunity in which medical students can provide a valuable health service while obtaining important skills that enable them to work more effectively within medically underserved communities. CONCLUSION: The BCEP is an innovative collaboration between academic medical centers, safety-net health systems, community-based organizations and public health organizations. It represents a model for addressing issues of disparate access to breast cancer screening within vulnerable communities that contribute to higher breast cancer mortality.
Epistemonikos ID: c9de0354e31ba3dbe19a3fd28528c0d5c72c280a
First added on: Jul 27, 2018