Europe
Clinical News
Informatics
Industry News
Practice Management
Education
Subspecialties
More
Sign In
Administration
Associations
Careers
Equity & Inclusion
Legislation
Medicolegal
Patient Safety
Radiologic Technologist
Service
Salary Scan
Equity & Inclusion: Page 4
Race, ethnicity tied to risk of delayed follow-up breast imaging
By
Amerigo Allegretto
Women who identify as Black, Asian, or Hispanic are nearly 1.5 times more at risk for delayed follow-up than white women when it comes to mammograms classified as incomplete on BI-RADS, according to a study published August 17 in the
Journal of the American College of Radiology
.
August 17, 2022
AI can predict patient demographics from chest x-rays
By
Erik L. Ridley
Artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms can identify a patient's demographic information with a high level of accuracy on chest x-rays, according to research published August 11 in the
Journal of the American College of Radiology
.
August 11, 2022
CT screening evens out gender disparity in lung cancer mortality
By
Brian Casey
Men with lung cancer have a much higher risk of mortality compared with women, says a new paper published August 1 in
Lung Cancer
. But this difference disappears if they got CT lung screening, suggesting that screening can even out gender disparities.
August 2, 2022
Insurance type influences adherence to follow-up imaging
By
Amerigo Allegretto
Patients with Medicaid have four times lower odds of completing follow-up imaging compared with patients with commercial insurance, a study published July 25 in
Clinical Imaging
found.
July 25, 2022
Biden creates new cancer care model for Medicare patients
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
The Biden administration has announced the Enhancing Oncology Model (EOM), a new model to improve cancer care among Medicare patients and address health equity.
June 26, 2022
Racial, ethnic groups face longer diagnostic delays after mammogram
By
Amerigo Allegretto
Black U.S. women are most likely to experience delays in diagnosis after being recommended for biopsy for abnormal screening mammography results, suggests a study published June 23 in
JAMA Oncology
.
June 23, 2022
Mammographic results vary across racial, ethnic groups
By
Amerigo Allegretto
Non-Hispanic Black women are more likely to receive a false-negative breast cancer report and non-Hispanic white women have higher invasive cancer detection rates, wrote the authors of a study published June 17 in
Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention
.
June 16, 2022
Study finds racial inequity in imaging rates at pediatric EDs
By
Erik L. Ridley
A large cross-sectional study encompassing 38 children's hospitals and more than 12Â million pediatric emergency department (ED) visits has found significant differences in imaging utilization among racial and ethnic groups.
June 2, 2022
Race, education affect perceptions of mammography reports
By
Erik L. Ridley
A woman's race and education level can significantly impact how they view the quality of mammography reports and how much they trust their radiologist, according to a talk at the recent Society of Breast Imaging/American College of Radiology symposium.
May 31, 2022
Black Americans in rural areas more likely to die of cancer
By
Kate Madden Yee
Black Americans living in rural settings are more vulnerable to dying of lung, prostate, breast, and colorectal cancer than their non-Black peers, even when sociodemographics and tumor characteristics are taken into account, according to a study published May 19 in
JAMA Network Open
.
May 19, 2022
Medicaid expansion reduces racial disparities
By
Will Morton
The expansion of federal Medicaid coverage in 2014 led to improved survival rates for patients with incurable breast cancer who were racial and ethnic minorities, according to a study published April 7 in
JAMA Oncology
.
April 7, 2022
Gender inequality leads to fewer mammograms for women
By
Amerigo Allegretto
Women who live in areas with less gender equality are at higher risk of not being on schedule for screening mammograms or not having them at all, according to a Swiss study published February 28 in
Social Medicine & Science
.
March 1, 2022
Previous Page
Page 4 of 18
Next Page