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Breast cancer is killing Black women, but is there anything we can do about it? Here's why Black women should be concerned about breast cancer.
Learn how breast cancer inequities impact Sacramento’s Black community and why early detection and equity-driven care are key in saving lives.
However, there are comparatively few reports on pretreatment bone health in women newly diagnosed with breast cancer, especially in predominantly Black populations, across sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), ...
The first genome-wide association study 1 (GWAS) of breast cancer to have been conducted on African women living in the continent identified two genetic variants linked to breast cancer in Black ...
Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill," argues Kierra Jones, is part of "conservatives’ political crusade to ban abortion and ...
Half of all women need more than a mammogram to detect breast cancer. Insurers won't always pay for it. More than two dozen states now have laws requiring health insurance plans to cover the tests ...
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Over the weekend, women of color in St. Petersburg shared their experiences with breast cancer, domestic violence and mental health. The program, called "Living Beyond Our ...
For many years, older Black and Hispanic women have faced barriers to receiving guideline-recommended treatments for breast cancer, contributing to varied outcomes and higher mortality rates ...
As Bowman sparred with Republican Marc Short, former Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff, he drew a link between recent acts of racial and political violence and rhetorical attacks against ...
Jane Lazarre, author of 'The Mother Knot', dies at 81. Her bold, honest memoirs reshaped how we see motherhood, identity, and ...
A Warning to Other Women Black women are 40 percent more likely to die from breast cancer than white women, according to the National Breast Cancer Foundation.