A new editorial published in JAMA Oncology warns that cancer care progress is under threat from a "trifecta" of challenges: proposed federal budget cuts, a surge in medical misinformation, and a critical gap in public health literacy.
Penn Nursing’s Connie M. Ulrich, PhD, RN, FAAN, the Lillian S. Brunner Chair in Medical and Surgical Nursing, Professor of Nursing, and Professor of Medical Ethics and Health Policy, served as lead author.
Ulrich and her co-authors argue that these factors risk undoing years of progress in cancer outcomes.
They are calling for an immediate, proactive shift in how researchers and clinicians communicate with the public.
Current Threats
The article identifies three primary barriers currently stalling oncological progress:
"Researchers cannot remain isolated in laboratories," says Ulrich. "We have a moral obligation to engage the public, correct misinformation, and ensure evidence-based information is accessible to everyone."
Call to Action
The editorial proposes a multipronged solution:
The authors conclude that failing to address these literacy barriers and funding threats today will result in "unprecedented harm" to future generations of patients.
Article: Cancer Research and Public Health Literacy—Making Sense
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