“The providers need to know what to look for so they can diagnose as soon as possible.” “The patients have to understand they are at risk so they can come to the doctor,” she says. At times, her patients of color have come to her with late-stage skin cancer that she believes may have been better treated if it had been detected earlier.īecause of a lack of awareness of the risks of skin cancer among Black people and clinicians’ lack of experience diagnosing skin conditions in people with darker skin, melanoma for Black patients can go untreated far longer than when it’s identified for White patients, Moossavi explains. As a dermatologist practicing in Detroit, Michigan, a city where the population is more than 80% people of color, Meena Moossavi, MD, has seen how health inequities have disproportionately harmed her patients.
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