Diabetes Remedies

What to Know if You’re Black With Head and Neck Cancer

What to Know if You’re Black With Head and Neck Cancer

What side effects are possible and how can I avoid them?

“Some of the most commonly used treatments for head and neck cancer can increase the risk of kidney damage, and chronic kidney disease is more common in the Black community,” adds Dr. Burtness. “For this reason, it is also a good idea to ask your doctor what the side effects and aftereffects of treatment will be, if the treatment will damage your kidneys and what you can do to reduce that risk,” she says.

Will my insurance cover treatment?

“The treatments for head and neck cancer involve surgery and radiation therapy, which tend to be costly,” says Meghan Crawley, MD, head and neck surgical oncologist at Miami Cancer Institute. Although many hospitals offer charity care for cancer patients without insurance, it is safer to ask if your insurance plan covers your treatment and what your options are if you are uninsured, she advises.

What will my follow-up care look like?

Keeping up with your follow-up appointments and post-treatment care after finishing therapy for head and neck cancer leads to a significant improvement in quality of life.

Burtness suggests asking what support you can receive from a nutritionist and speech or physical therapist to help you during treatment and follow-up care.

“It is essential to know what the follow-up schedule looks like and learn prevention strategies to reduce the risk of recurrence,” says Dr. Taylor. “Usually, you will undergo testing and surveillance visits several times a year to confirm your response to treatment and monitor for any recurrence,” Dr. Crawley adds.

Will I be given specialized care?

It would help if you asked whether your facility provides tertiary care, says Dr. Bhayani, which means specialized care delivered by specialists with extra training and experience. Mortality rates of Black and white people with head and neck cancer are essentially the same when care is delivered at a tertiary care hospital, he says.

It’s important to know that no matter your color, several people will be involved in your care, Bhayani adds, including teams of specialists and an increasingly important team member known as the patient navigator, who is professionally trained in cancer care. “Their expertise comes from their lived experiences, and they can help you navigate the parts of the cancer journey that don’t wind through hospital halls,” he says.

For optimal outcomes, Taylor recommends having a treatment team that understands and addresses the cultural and social barriers that impact treatment.

Crawley encourages Black people to select specialists you feel comfortable with and have confidence in their care. It is also important to communicate to your healthcare team any cultural practices or beliefs that are important to you and can impact your treatment decisions or care, she adds.

Am I eligible for any clinical trials?

Ask if any clinical trials that might improve cure rates or help reduce toxicity are available. Although getting past generations of mistrust — especially involving the word “experiment” — will take years, Bhayani encourages Black patients to help researchers develop new cures for everyone by enlisting in clinical trials.

“If new drugs and treatments are developed based on studies where the population is 90 percent white, available treatments will be evidence-based therapies for white patients,” he says. “Do your research, ask questions about the evidence, and [get] the answers you deserve.”

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