Inequities in Surgical Access for Women With Endometrial Cancer in the United States: Opportunities for Surgical Justice

Regina Leonis & Cheryl Franklin · 2025-02-09

1Citations

Significant disparities exist in women with endometrial cancer. Disparate incidence and mortality rates affect many populations including racial/ethnic minority women and women who live in rural communities. These populations are more likely to experience delays in care due to multi-dimensional factors ranging from lack of awareness between the women and their non-gynecologic providers to lack of access to health care and/or to gynecologic oncologists. Multiple layers of intervention will be needed to mitigate the inequities, including policy changes, advocacy to change insurance coverage, and network inclusion of gynecologic oncologists. There are opportunities for non-gynecological surgical specialists who take care of women at risk of endometrial cancer to facilitate multidisciplinary care and to refer as appropriately to gynecologic specialty care.

TL;DR

Significant disparities exist in women with endometrial cancer and multiple layers of intervention will be needed to mitigate the inequities, including policy changes, advocacy to change insurance coverage, and network inclusion of gynecologic oncologists.

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