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    My Experience with Oncology Clinical Research: How Clinical Trials Silently Exclude Urban Patients and What I Have Done to Make One Research Program More Inclusive

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    TETDEDXDoyle-temple-0225M-13710.pdf
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    Genre
    Thesis/Dissertation
    Date
    2019
    Author
    Doyle, Jamie L
    Advisor
    Rocco, Providenza Loera
    Committee member
    Jones, Nora L.
    Strand, Nicolle K.
    Department
    Urban Bioethics
    Subject
    Medical Ethics
    Ethics
    Public Health
    Minorities in Clinical Trials
    Oncology Clinical Research
    Urban Bioethics
    Permanent link to this record
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/2800
    
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    DOI
    http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/2782
    Abstract
    As an oncology clinical researcher at an urban hospital, I reflected on patient stories and see overlying themes: financial hurdles, treatment delays, difficulties completing treatment, ineligibility for clinical trials, and other barriers to care specific to urban patients. Delays in cancer treatment have been linked to a decrease in overall survival; consequently, reducing observed blockades could be a matter of life and death. Clinical trials provide more treatment options while researching possible standard of care therapies for future patients. As novel anticancer treatments become more biomolecule specific and low minority enrollment on clinical trials used to validate these drugs continues, I ask, “Why”? I believe urban patients are unethically excluded from participating in clinical trials by overly restrictive study eligibility criteria, high out-of-pocket costs, lengthy informed consents written either not at the patient’s reading level or not in their language, as well as other deterrents associated with low socioeconomic status. More minority representation in clinic trials is necessary to ensure drugs seeking FDA approval are more representative of the population. I argue more needs to be done to make studies more inclusive. Though challenges enrolling urban patients onto clinical trials remains, I believe there are still ways to enhance their cancer care: 1) identifying or writing treatment clinical trials that are more inclusive; and 2) developing studies with interventions that target socioeconomic barriers to care.
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