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Original Articles

‘Use what God has given me’: Difference and disparity in breast reconstruction

, , &
Pages 1099-1120
Received 10 Aug 2012
Accepted 01 Mar 2013
Accepted author version posted online: 08 Mar 2013
Published online: 05 Apr 2013

African-American women are significantly less likely to undergo postmastectomy breast reconstruction compared to white women in the USA. These observed differences have been interpreted as evidence of a healthcare disparity. The current study examines breast reconstruction decision-making among African-American women, locating reconstruction decisions in a context of culture, racial inequality and biomedicalisation. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 27 African-American women who underwent mastectomy for breast cancer to add patient-centred perspectives to existing conceptualisations of racial/ethnic differences in reconstruction. Participants were socio-demographically diverse, and resided in the New York metropolitan area. Data analysis was informed by grounded theory. Spiritually and culturally informed body ethics often guided surgery decisions. Participants expressed reservations about breast implants, preferring autologous procedures that use ‘what God has given’. For some, breast reconstruction restored a sense of normalcy after cancer; others challenged an imperative to reconstruct. Several participants redirected our focus on access to reconstruction toward access to alternatives, noting the low reimbursement for prostheses, or their unavailability in patients’ skin tones. We suggest that a framework of ‘stratified biomedicalization’ better addresses the complexities of race, class and gender that inform preference, access and recommendations for breast reconstruction, and focuses attention on access to high and low-tech interventions.

Acknowledgements

We gratefully acknowledge Yamaris Perez, Taja Ferguson and Gina Turner, who conducted interviews, and Mary Carol Mazza, Rachel Guerrero, Julie Taub and Jennie Fretts, for their involvement with data coding. We especially thank our participants for sharing their cancer stories with our research group.

 

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