Breast cancer is more likely to kill young Black women. A Sask. researcher wants to see that change
When Kwaku Ayisi lost a friend who hadn't even reached 40 to breast cancer, it inspired him to look at the barriers Black women face in Saskatchewan's breast-health system.
Ayisi, a researcher at the University of Regina, saw that Black women had much higher breast cancer mortality rates and wanted to know why.
He found that Black women are more likely to get breast cancer earlier in life, more prone to aggressive forms and have a higher mortality rate.
Ayisi also found a lot of systemic barriers: language, cultural beliefs and a lack of education on breast cancer.
Disproportionate consequences
The Canadian Cancer Society said a recent study found Black women in Canada are more likely to be diagnosed with breast cancer at a younger age, more likely to be diagnosed at advanced stages and more likely to have triple-negative breast cancer, which is harder to treat and associated with worse outcomes.
Data collected by the American Cancer Society found that while breast cancer rates are similar between Black and white women, Black women have a mortality rate roughly 40 per cent higher.
"Among women under 50, the disparity is even greater: While young women have a higher incidence of aggressive cancers, young Black women have double the mortality rate of young white women," the Breast Cancer Research Foundation (BCRF) says on its website about the data.
BCRF says that while technology has reduced overall mortality rates, it hasn't benefited all groups equally.
"Through continued research, it's clear that biology also plays a role," BCRF says.
Screening age coming down
Saskatchewan is in the process of lowering the age at which all women can be screened for breast cancer without specific concerns.
The province recently announced it would gradually lower the age limit for screening mammograms to 40 from 50. Anyone age 47 or above can now book a screening mammogram without a doctor's referral. The limit will drop to 45 in June and continue to lower over time.
Saskatchewan's Ministry of Health said in a statement that race is not a factor in breast cancer screening eligibility in the province. It said it eligibility ages are largely informed by national breast screening guidelines provided by the Canadian Task Force on Preventative Health Care.
"It currently recommends women aged of 50-74 should be screening regularly and women aged 40-50 should be provided information about the benefits and harms of screening to make a personal screening decision that aligns with their risks, values and preferences," the statement said.
The ministry said anyone with symptoms of breast cancer or concerns should talk to their doctor about screening, regardless of age. It also said it welcomes any research and, "will take into account any findings of interest in future policy considerations."
Ayisi wants to see race and ethnicity considered when breast cancer data is analyzed to inform policy in Saskatchewan.
He also wants more education on what breast cancer is, how it affects Black women differently from other groups and the importance of early mammography. He believes that could lead to more Black women seeking screening.
Early detection vital
Sonia Reid, a vocal coach in Saskatchewan, recently had her own cancer scare.
"I am an individual who benefits from the screening and is actively being screened as we speak because we have some concerns," said Reid.
She agreed that early detection is vital.
"I love hearing the stories of, 'oh, we caught it early enough.' That's what I want to hear," she said. "I don't want to hear, 'I didn't know until it's too late,'" she said.
Reid said Ayisi's work is very important for Black women like her.
"The access, and knowledge it would bring, and how that would just bring people's mental health and their sense of wellness on a day-to-day basis to a higher level," she said.
"When you're walking through life and obscurity, not knowing, maybe you're not feeling well, maybe something seems off, but you're not sure of what to do. That's not the place you want to be."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

CBC
4 days ago
- CBC
Growing for good: U of Regina garden produce feeds hungry stomachs
Fresh produce harvested from a garden at the University of Regina is helping combat food insecurity and teaching people about the art of gardening. Members of the Regina Public Interest Research Group — a student-funded resource centre at the university with a focus on social and environmental justice — have been growing vegetables, from zucchini to tomatoes to spinach, in a garden located behind the Dr. John Archer Library since the spring. They've harvested over 100 kilograms of vegetables, which are then donated to local organizations, including the Cathedral Community Fridge, Carmichael Outreach and YWCA Regina. Tayef Ahmed, the group's executive director, said some of the food also gets donated to a fridge run by the University of Regina Students' Union, which students can access. According to a 2024 study by University of Saskatchewan students, nearly a third of Canadian post-secondary students said they experienced food insecurity in 2023. While Regina's public interest group is currently collecting U of R-specific data, Ahmed said demand for the food donated to the student union's fridge has increased. "Within five to 10 minutes, almost all of the food [is] gone," said Ahmed. "We have way more interest or demand in getting vegetables than we ever anticipated." Ahmed said newcomers to Canada are the largest group among the fridge's clientele. As a result, his group has started growing a more diverse variety of foods to suit their needs, such as amaranth and peppers, he said. "When people from different backgrounds comes and says, 'Hey, I used to grow up eating this, I'm so glad I got this' … they would come every week and say, 'Can I have some vegetables?'" Ahmed believes the fresh vegetables in the garden offer an alternative for more expensive produce at the grocery store, which may also be damaged or close to expiration, he said. His organization is now expanding its garden and offering gardening sessions, which Ahmed hopes will help students find ways to grow their own food. "Eventually, when they buy a new house or apartment … they get this education themselves, and when they get older, they start something [of] their own," he said. Community organizations grateful for food Grayson Somers works in the kitchen at Carmichael Outreach, which serves lunch to people experiencing homelessness in Regina every weekday. He said the produce from the garden is put to good use. "We prepare it all and we'll make meals — about 150 to 250 meals per day," said Somers. "With the grocery stores nowadays, the price changes, and I just think everyone should be growing their own gardens." The produce will be similarly used in the YWCA Regina's kitchen. "We don't typically get this much fresh produce," said Mackenzie Thiessen, who works in the YWCA's outreach area. "To have a lot of it will mean a lot." Thiessen said their clients are "like a kid in a candy store" when they see the fresh food. "When you're on the street, you don't get access to fresh stuff often. It humanizes their experience, makes them feel normal, regular." Back in the garden at the U of R, garden assistant Brooke Litzenberger laughs as she shows volunteers how to pick beans in the hot August sun. She's spent hours working since the spring to get everything ready for harvest. "Being able to give back to the community … and watch everyone enjoy everything that we've worked so hard with has been a really great part of this job." Regina community garden provides fresh free vegetables to local groups 2 days ago The University of Regina community garden is a place to learn about gardening as well as providing vegetables to a handful of charitable organizations in the city.


CTV News
4 days ago
- CTV News
‘Live my life out loud': P.E.I. woman battling cancer encourages others to ‘just live'
Prince Edward Islander Michelle Hughes is documenting her cancer journey daily, while encouraging others to live and embrace the joy in everyday. (Source: Facebook / My Journey to Just Live) Michelle Hughes is on a journey to 'just live,' and she's encouraging others to do the same. The 38-year-old Prince Edward Islander from Cornwall is a mother of three young children. She's also battling stage four incurable cancer. Four years ago, and three weeks after giving birth to her third child, Hughes was diagnosed with stage four Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma, or EHE. The Canadian Cancer Society describes EHE as 'a cancerous (malignant) tumour that starts in the blood vessels.' At the time, an oncologist gave her three to five years to live. 'Obviously, I was heartbroken and devastated and envisioned my husband raising our children all by himself. And that oncologist really left a mark in my heart thinking that I need to savour every moment moving forward for these children because they're not going to remember me,' explains Hughes in an interview with CTV Atlantc. 'Thankfully, I came about another oncologist who was a sarcoma cancer specialist at the Princess Margaret (Cancer Centre). And she had said, 'Sure, you could die in those five years. You could die in three years. But I have patients living for decades. And I have hope for you, so I want you to just live.'' The conversation was a turning point for Hughes. 'That's when I realized that tomorrow is not promised to anybody. And I took her slogan, and ran with it, literally. It changed my life. I decided to live my life out loud.' Michelle Hughes Four years ago, Michelle Hughes was diagnosed with stage four Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma, or EHE. (Source: Facebook / My Journey to Just Live) She started by documenting her cancer battle online under the banner My Journey To Just Live. She also wanted to create daily posts with her husband, Ty, and young children as a family keepsake. 'For them to look back and see all the fun memories that we've captured, and all the joy that we've been chasing as a family. But it's evolved into so much more as people actually started to read it and to follow along. And I never envisioned that in a million years, so that's not at all what I set out when I started my journey to just live.' Michelle Hughes Michelle Hughes is pictured with her husband and three children. (Source: Facebook / My Journey to Just Live) Along with challenging herself physically, Hughes' decision to 'just live' included a mind shift change. 'Like, things that you used to just take for granted in life are something that you value every moment of every day,' she says. 'For example, walking my children to the bus stop is my favourite part of my everyday, because when I get to stand there and see my two girls looking out the window back at me and I'm there smiling at them, it's amazing. It's a beautiful feeling because my four-year-old son's hand, who I'm holding, he might not get that opportunity.' Michelle Hughes Michelle Hughes is pictured with her son. (Source: Facebook / My Journey to Just Live) Making an impact People following her journey include over 96,000 on Facebook and 446,000 on Instagram. Her daily posts serve as a diary entry: experiences with the family, daily errands, feelings, life lessons and self reflection. 'It gives a raw, real perspective of what it's like in my journey to just live because, you know, we could meet somebody else who has stage four cancer as well, but we might be walking completely different lives,' says Hughes. 'So, I always just reiterate that this is my journey to just live, and it's been beautiful to connect with cancer survivors and survivors around the world, and just people suffering with chronic health conditions, and hearing from them how me living my life out loud has supported them, and it's been so beautiful to be a part of.' Michelle also has a podcast, and was featured in a documentary called The Journey Home, where she ran, cycled and swam a total of 120 kilometres from the Moncton Hospital to her home in P.E.I. Michelle Hughes Michelle Hughes is pictured in a gym. (Source: Facebook / My Journey to Just Live) Forward thinking Hughes is choosing to 'just live' alongside battling cancer. 'Unfortunately, right now, over the last few weeks my liver pain has come back, and it's out of the norm for me. I'll be going in my CT scan again next week.' Hughes says the cancer she has is 'considered incurable' and there isn't a 'standard protocol' for treating it. In the coming weeks, she'll begin participating in a new clinical trial out of Toronto. 'It is not a pharmaceutically sponsored trial. So, all costs will be on us, but it's not stopping us. We're moving forward because we have hope that it's going to help bring me back to stability as my cancer has been progressing since last year. It's been growing every three months.' Despite these challenges, Hughes isn't slowing down. While preparing for the clinical trial to begin, she is also planning the third annual Just Live Fun Run in Cornwall, P.E.I. on Sunday, Aug. 24. More than 1,500 people have registered, and 500 race kits have been shipped to 12 countries for people who will be participating virtually. 'Last year alone we raised $108,000. All proceeds go to Sarcoma Cancer Foundation of Canada, where they match every dollar.' Michelle Hughes Michelle Hughes is planning the third annual Just Live Fun Run in Cornwall, P.E.I. on Sunday, Aug. 24. (Source: Facebook / My Journey to Just Live) Hughes also has her sights set on her next endurance event in 2026. 'Next year will be my five year 'cancerversary' date. We have something really special we'll be announcing in the coming months. It's going to be so difficult, but I think it's what my body needs and what I mentally need to get through this clinical trial because, obviously, I'm scared, and it's going to be a rough journey. But I need something physically to set my body up for success and to mentally keep me in the game. And I'm really excited to announce this next endurance event that I'm about to do.' As for anyone looking to 'just live' her advice is simple. 'Just live in the moment. It doesn't cost money. You don't have to exert yourself. It's literally just standing in a moment that you don't know you'll have forever and just savouring it.' For more P.E.I. news, visit ourdedicated provincial page.


CTV News
6 days ago
- CTV News
Kayaking 4 Cancer initiative paddling toward $1-million mark
A group of paddlers that has been navigating the Rideau Canal for the last 25 years is looking to cross the $1-million mark in funds raised for the Canadian Cancer Society. The Kayaking 4 Cancer initiative has taken on the challenge of paddling from Kingston to Parliament Hill in Ottawa every August. Kevin Dionne started Kayaking 4 Cancer after having the disease impact his family multiple times. 'In 2001, I just got tired of hearing the word. I was frustrated. I didn't know what I could do,' Dionne tells CTV News Ottawa. 'I remember as a small boy, after my mother's first diagnosis of cancer, her going house-to-house-to-house-to-house with a clipboard asking people for a donation. So, this didn't come lightly by me.' That first paddle in 2001 saw about a half dozen kayakers — family and friends of Dionne — take on the journey. Over the years, the event has grown and gained sponsorships. 'I've been a son of somebody with cancer. I've been a son-in-law of somebody with cancer. I've been a friend of somebody with cancer. I've been a cousin of somebody with cancer. I've been a nephew of somebody with cancer. I've never been a cancer patient,' says Dionne. 'I've seen it, and I've witnessed it from the beginning to the last breath. And if I can't kayak the Rideau system for eight days to show those people in my heart that I care; I just wanted to do that.' Heading into its 25th year, Kayaking 4 Cancer was roughly $122,000 shy of reaching the $1-million mark. All funds raised over the years have gone directly to the Canadian Cancer Society. 'We're a small group. We're just families and friends. We're not a big corporation. We never thought the day we started this we'd be here 25 years later. And we never thought we'd see $1 million,' said Kurt Dionne, Kevin's brother and co-organizer. When the group of about 20 kayakers reaches its destination of Parliament Hill Saturday, Kayaking 4 Cancer will have covered 5,000 kilometres along the Rideau system in its 25 years, a length that was a goal for Dionne to reach when first setting off in 2001. 'Terry Fox is a hero of mine. I remember him running through Brockville and just to think that it's the 45th anniversary of his Marathon of Hope and that's our 25th year of doing Kayaking 4 Cancer. It's not about the money anymore. It's about showing people with cancer that I care.' Donations to the paddlers' efforts can be made at 'It will be an honor to say that we've given the Canadian Cancer Society $1 million,' says Dionne