Project aims to reduce br

Washington University School of Medicine Press Release
July 6, 2011
By Julia Evangelou Strait

Sarah Gehlert, PhD

Health-care specialists at the Alvin J. Siteman Cancer Center at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and Barnes-Jewish Hospital are working to improve breast cancer care for African-American women living in North St. Louis City, where death rates from breast cancer are disproportionately high.

“Although African-American women are less likely than white women to get breast cancer, they are 37 percent more likely to die from it,” says Sarah J. Gehlert, PhD, the E. Desmond Lee Professor of Racial and Ethnic Diversity at Washington University. “And in St. Louis, that disparity is even greater.”

With support from Susan G. Komen for the Cure, researchers at Washington University’s Program for the Elimination of Cancer Disparities (PECaD) seek to identify reasons behind the breast cancer disparity and to help close gaps in care that leave African-American women in North St. Louis particularly vulnerable.

 

Graham Colditz, MD, PhD

“We’ll be looking for barriers that some women experience as they navigate their cancer care,” says Graham A. Colditz, MD, PhD, the Niess-Gain Professor and a co-principal investigator on the project with Gehlert. “African-American women in North St. Louis are more likely to get a diagnosis of late-stage breast cancer. And if they get a diagnosis, they are more likely to drop out of treatment. From a community perspective, we are working to map out the complex web of reasons why people might not follow through, or be able to follow through, on treatment.”

Toward this goal, Washington University investigators will collaborate with four community partners in the region, including:

  • Christian Hospital, where many breast cancer patients living in North St. Louis City and north St. Louis County go for treatment.
    Betty Jean Kerr People’s Health Centers, which provide primary care and cancer screening, including mammograms, for the uninsured and for underserved communities in North St. Louis City.
  • Committed Caring Faith Communities, which includes a network of 22 churches in St. Louis whose clergy members are interested in the overlap of faith, disease prevention, treatment and recovery of health.
  • Women’s Wellness Program, part of the St. Louis Effort for AIDS, whose case managers and prevention research specialists have worked with medically underserved women in North St. Louis since 1985.
  • With the help of these community partners, the researchers will hold town hall meetings and one-on-one interviews with breast cancer patients to try to understand the barriers women encounter and help the institutions adapt their practices to better serve the women of North St. Louis.

“We’ll follow women who never went to treatment, women who began treatment but for some reason did not complete it, and women who finished treatment,” Gehlert says. “To reduce these disparities, you can’t just develop better chemotherapy. You have to go into the community.”

Washington University School of Medicine’s 2,100 employed and volunteer faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of the leading medical research, teaching and patient care institutions in the nation, currently ranked fourth in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

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