Futurity

Breast cancer is more deadly without insurance

Uninsured patients were 60 percent more likely to die from breast cancer, according to cancer registry data from 50,000 patients.

Research has found that uninsured patients were 60 percent more likely to die from breast cancer.

Uninsured women with breast cancer were nearly 2.6 times more likely to have a late-stage diagnosis than cancer patients who were insured, the study in the journal Cancer shows.

“Access to screening services may play a role in the association between insurance status and breast cancer stage at diagnosis and survival,” says lead author Kimberly Johnson, associate professor at the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis. “Improving access to primary care and mammography screenings in these populations may improve breast cancer outcomes.”

Researchers analyzed cancer registry data from more than 50,000 women age 18-64 who were diagnosed with breast cancer in 2007 and 2008. They found that patients with Medicaid were also more likely to be diagnosed with late-stage cancer and have worse survival rates than those with private insurance, although they had better diagnoses and outcomes than uninsured women.

In addition, report the researchers, lower proportions of uninsured, black, unmarried, and younger women survived five years following their breast cancer diagnosis.

breast cancer graphs
(Credit: WUSTL)

Source: Washington University in St. Louis

The post Breast cancer is more deadly without insurance appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
Quantum Physics Could Make Measuring Time More Precise
Superradiant atoms could push the boundaries of how precisely time can be measured, researchers report. The second is the most precisely-defined unit of measurement, compared to other base units such as the kilogram, meter, and degree Kelvin. Time is
Futurity2 min read
New Portable Fentanyl Sensor Is Super Sensitive
A new fentanyl sensor is six orders of magnitude more sensitive than any electrochemical sensor for the drug reported in the past five years. The portable sensor can also tell the difference between fentanyl and other opioids. Fentanyl is a synthetic
Futurity3 min readIntelligence (AI) & Semantics
People Rate AI As More Moral Than Other Humans
When people are presented with two answers to an ethical question, most will think the answer from artificial intelligence is better than the response from another person. The explosion of ChatGPT and similar AI large language models (LLMs) which cam

Related Books & Audiobooks