NPR

Distrust Of Health Care System May Keep Black Men Away From Prostate Cancer Research

Black men are hit hardest by prostate cancer, but they are underrepresented in research. Researchers held focus groups in three states to understand why.
Black men are twice as likely as whites to die from prostate cancer, one of the deadliest cancers that affect males.

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer for men in the U.S.(other than non-melanoma skin cancer) and one of the most deadly. It's especially deadly for black men, who are more likely to get it and twice as likely as white men to die from it. Yet black men tend to be underrepresented in research for prostate cancer treatment.

A published Wednesday in the captured a snapshot of the attitudes black men have regarding prostate cancer research and the evolving field of genomic testing, finding significant mistrust of the healthcare that has documented that African-Americans are less likely to trust clinical research than white Americans.

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