Rome experienced a career high talking with Dr. Otis W. Brawley, a globally recognized Medical Oncologist and Epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center, about his work to reduce healthcare disparities.
Dr Bawley is a former Chief Medical and Scientific Officer of the American Cancer Society, and an author on the recent Report on the Status of Disparities in the United States 2025.
Rome gets to the heart of why his work has shown that people do not always get the same care inside the health system. Dr Brawley says giving people access to care is not enough. Many patients still get later diagnoses, slower follow‑up, weaker or older treatments, and fewer chances to join clinical trials. These are real, measurable differences caused by provider choices and are at the root of cancer disparities.
Key takeaways from this in-depth conversation about disparities:
- Care that causes disparities differs in clear ways, including delays in diagnosis and treatment inequity.
- Why systemic changes to protocols and measuring clinician adherence beats simple training to deter differential treatment.
- Practical solutions like patient navigation and equity metrics to reduce preventable deaths.



