Power of Ideas: The Health Equity Movement and the War on Cancer

The COVID-19 pandemic and the murder of George Floyd brought to national attention inequities in the provisioning of health care in the United States—inequities that endanger the lives of millions of Americans. Those two historic events gave rise to the health equity movement (HEM), committed to addressing long-standing injustice. Leaders of HEM recognize that the legacy health care system creates inequities by design because it is a tiered scheme that marginalizes people of color and others who are adversely affected by persistent poverty.

If these inequities are to be resolved, then we must reimagine health care financing and delivery systems in the US. Health care financing must align with science, which teaches us that life is emergent from the physical laws of nature. This fidelity can be articulated in two axiomatic statements: Every patient should have access to appropriate care, and health care financing and delivery should not elevate a patient’s risk for a poor outcome or a poor quality of life. These HEM axioms can be summarized as patient risk mitigation.

“If inequities are to be resolved, then we must reimagine health care financing and delivery systems in the US.”

The War on Cancer Reveals One of the Fault Lines between the Legacy System and HEM

There has been substantial progress in cancer treatment, screening, diagnosis, and prevention over the past several decades, but disparities remain. Lower socioeconomic groups, certain racial/ethnic populations, and geographically isolated populations tend to exhibit higher cancer-death rates, less frequent use of proven screening tests, and higher rates of advanced cancer diagnoses. These disparities are not irregular occurrences but rather are stable patterns that characterize legacy health care.

Early cancer detection improves long-term health outcomes. However, many cancers do not have screening tools. Only five cancers (breast, colorectal, cervical, lung, and prostate cancers) have early detection tests and associated screening recommendations. Extending early detection to other cancers may improve long-term health outcomes for ethnic and racial minorities who often receive late-stage diagnoses for cancers without screening tools.

Early Detection Can Lead to Less-Intensive Treatments and Better Patient Outcomes

With the commercial launch of Galleri, a multi-cancer early detection (MCED) screening, a paradigm shift in cancer care has occurred, with other MCEDs soon to be available. An MCED test simultaneously detects and localizes multiple cancers from a single blood draw. MCEDs amplify existing screening by working with them to increase the absolute number of cancers detected, including those lacking recommended screening programs. They are able to detect many cancers that otherwise would go undetected until later stages, when signs or symptoms appear. MCEDs portend an overall stage shift in cancer care (from late to early stage), with the potential for less-intensive treatments and better patient outcomes.

MCEDs are breakthrough science, but unfortunately government health insurance (Medicare and Medicaid), which covers 45 percent of the American public, is reacting lethargically with outdated policies that could delay access for minorities and the poor for up to 10 years. Meanwhile, the affluent, who have health insurance or can pay out of pocket, will be able to get the screenings now. The consequence will be greater inequities in cancer care. Minorities and poor people will die disproportionately from late-stage metastatic cancers, and the affluent will have a survival benefit having their cancer diagnosed at an early stage. Left to its own devices, the legacy health care financing system will be elevating the metastatic cancer risk for Black, brown, and poor people by inaction.

MCEDs have brought us to the end stage of the war on cancer. The ability to diagnose and treat cancer before patients are symptomatic offers a paradigm shift in cancer care. It raises the possibility that in the future we will treat cancer at very early stages of the disease, greatly reducing—if not eliminating—cancer as a life-threatening illness!

To realize the promise of MCEDs for all Americans, HEM is calling for immediacy in the coordination of policy and science to validate and create access to MCEDs while simultaneously developing treatments for early-stage cancers. HEM is about intentionality where health care policies are adherent to the physical laws from which life is emergent. This intentionality is brought to the war on cancer as a learning community where policy, bench, and bedside are integrated in a stage-shifting maneuver to eliminate inequities in cancer care with an unwillingness to postpone.

Trending Topics

Features

Download and distribute powerful vaccination QI resources for your community.

Sign up now to support health equity and sustainable health outcomes in your community.

MCED tests use a simple blood draw to screen for many kinds of cancer at once.

FYHN is a bridge connecting health information providers to BIPOC communities in a trusted environment.

Discover an honest look at our Medicare system.

ARC was launched to create a network of community clinicians to diversify and bring clinical trials to communities of color and other communities that have been underrepresented.

The single most important purpose of our healthcare system is to reduce patient risk for an acute event.

Related Posts
Alonzo Mourning Receives 2025 Booker T. Washington Award for Health Equity Leadership
Financial and Psychosocial Challenges Among Women with Metastatic Breast Cancer: A Qualitative Study

pubmed

NAMT Hiring Licensed Mental Health Therapists in Maryland to Serve Black and Latino Communities

blacknews

Scroll to Top
Featured Articles
Alonzo Mourning receives 2025 Booker T. Washington Award at NMQF Summit
Alonzo Mourning Receives 2025 Booker T. Washington Award for Health Equity Le...
Cancer survivor support group session
Financial and Psychosocial Challenges Among Women with Metastatic Breast Canc...

pubmed

Black therapist working remotely with a client via video call
NAMT Hiring Licensed Mental Health Therapists in Maryland to Serve Black and ...

blacknews

Screenshot 2025-04-30 at 8.09.56 AM
Honoring Dr. Michael Zollicoffer at the 2025 NMQF Leadership Summit Gala
Incora Health smart earrings for fertility tracking
Innovating Women’s Health: Lindsey Calcutt on Smart Wearables and Fertility T...

jdsupra

Native American elder accessing Medicare and IHS services
Medicare Eligibility and Assistance for American Indians and Alaska Natives

aol

Categories
BIPOC News
Cancer
Clinical Trials
Diseases of the Body
Environment
Health Data
Health Equity Events
Health Policy
LGBTQ Health
Mental Health
Original Story
Outbreaks
Subscribe to our newsletter to receive our latest news​
All Stories
Alonzo Mourning receives 2025 Booker T. Washington Award at NMQF Summit
Alonzo Mourning Receives 2025 Booker T. Washington Award for Health Equity Le...
Cancer survivor support group session
Financial and Psychosocial Challenges Among Women with Metastatic Breast Canc...

pubmed

Black therapist working remotely with a client via video call
NAMT Hiring Licensed Mental Health Therapists in Maryland to Serve Black and ...

blacknews

BIPOC News
Elderly patient in a disadvantaged neighborhood experiencing delayed home healthcare services
Impact of Delayed Home Healthcare on Underserved Communities: Addressing Disp...

mcknights

a5d4a9244182058e2b8979906a48d466eb8850ad-5184x3456.jpg
Lung Cancer Screening Facilities Least Accessible to American Indian/Alaska N...

ajmc

Latinx_Mental_Health___RECO.jpg
Mental Health Advocates Aim to Dismantle Barriers to Care for Latinx Residents

nonprofitquarterly

Environment
NTJABOLWK5DRXCRKQF5M7BMADY.JPG
Budget cuts jeopardize program providing heat pumps for low-income Oregonians

oregonlive

Aerial-View-of-Narragansett.jpg
Data Shows More Heat Pump Rebates Going to Wealthy Zip Codes Rather than Low-...

ecori

Davis-Greenspace-Divide-01.jpg
Heat Inequality in LA: How Urban Design Leaves Minority Communities Vulnerabl...

time.news

Work Force
Black therapist working remotely with a client via video call
NAMT Hiring Licensed Mental Health Therapists in Maryland to Serve Black and ...

blacknews

A Women's Health Nurse Practitioner smiling.
Women's Health Nurse Practitioners: Roles, Responsibilities, and Pathways to ...

dailynurse

Multiracial group of patients participating in a cardiac rehabilitation exercise session, promoting equitable access to heart health programs.
Cardiac Rehab & Ethnic Health: Uncovering Disparities & Solutions

pubmed

Clinical Trials
change-healthcare-clinical-trials-scaled.jpg
How Any Black Person Can Change the Future of Healthcare

blackdoctor

pubmed-meta-image-v2.jpg
Improving diverse patient enrollment in clinical trials, focusing on Hispanic...

pubmed

Pulse oximeters may misread oxygen levels in people of color. The FDA wants t...

apnews

Vaccines and Outbreaks
measles-outbreak-2025-vaccination
Measles Outbreak 2025: Causes, Impact, and Prevention Strategies
AP22082580247611-768x432
Continuing surveillance of emerging disease threats is vital for public healt...

statnews

77491890007-usatgraphics-virussymptomstopper
Where are COVID, flu and RSV cases rising in the US? See maps

usatoday

Other Categories
Cancer
Read the latest Cancer stories trending around the world
Diseases of the Body
Read about the latest Diseases of the Body trending around the world
Friday Webinars
Every Friday, we bring you insightful webinars covering critical topics in healthcare, data equity, and policy reform.
Health Data
Read the latest Health Data stories trending around the world
Health Equity Events
Read the best Health Equity Events around the country.
Health Policy
Read the latest Health Policy stories trending around the world
LGBTQ Health
Read the latest LGBTQ Health stories trending around the world
Lift Every Voice Patient Network
Mental Health
Read the latest Mental Health stories trending around the world
Original Story
Read the latest stories from For Your Health News trending now
Outbreaks
Podcasts
Listen to the latest stories that are trending around the world