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Not just a number

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Manage episode 299208547 series 2904083
Content provided by Serena Hu. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Serena Hu or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Shoni gets vulnerable and candid about her mom’s and her own experience with cancer and why her voice as a Black woman, matters.
You can connect with Shoni on Instagram @brsuga and learn more about For the Breast of Us on their website.
Please follow the podcast if you are enjoying the show. Would also be awesome if you can leave an honest rating and review so I know if I am serving the interests and needs of you listeners out there.
Have topic suggestions or feedback about the show? Contact me on Instagram or email me at [email protected].
Thank you for listening!
++++++++++++
My reflections on the conversation:
After our recording, I thought a lot about Shoni’s experience with the receptionist at the oncologist’s office. It’s the kind of experience that is so familiar to those of us who have had to navigate the healthcare system to get care for complex medical conditions. But it is even more stressful when you know that by speaking up, you will be labeled and dismissed with a negative stereotype, like the “angry black woman.”
These kinds of stressors, even if seemingly minor in isolation, add up over time, and not just in healthcare, but across all kinds of important areas in life, such as education, work, and housing. It’s therefore not surprising that minority groups have less positive health outcomes - living with cancer is completely overwhelming as it is, so some days you just may not have the energy to get over the extra hurdle thrown at you. But that sometimes can make all the difference in your trajectory.
A big shout out to Shoni for bringing to life what we read about in research papers and textbooks. You are not just a number, and we thank you for helping us see you.

  continue reading

44 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 299208547 series 2904083
Content provided by Serena Hu. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Serena Hu or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Shoni gets vulnerable and candid about her mom’s and her own experience with cancer and why her voice as a Black woman, matters.
You can connect with Shoni on Instagram @brsuga and learn more about For the Breast of Us on their website.
Please follow the podcast if you are enjoying the show. Would also be awesome if you can leave an honest rating and review so I know if I am serving the interests and needs of you listeners out there.
Have topic suggestions or feedback about the show? Contact me on Instagram or email me at [email protected].
Thank you for listening!
++++++++++++
My reflections on the conversation:
After our recording, I thought a lot about Shoni’s experience with the receptionist at the oncologist’s office. It’s the kind of experience that is so familiar to those of us who have had to navigate the healthcare system to get care for complex medical conditions. But it is even more stressful when you know that by speaking up, you will be labeled and dismissed with a negative stereotype, like the “angry black woman.”
These kinds of stressors, even if seemingly minor in isolation, add up over time, and not just in healthcare, but across all kinds of important areas in life, such as education, work, and housing. It’s therefore not surprising that minority groups have less positive health outcomes - living with cancer is completely overwhelming as it is, so some days you just may not have the energy to get over the extra hurdle thrown at you. But that sometimes can make all the difference in your trajectory.
A big shout out to Shoni for bringing to life what we read about in research papers and textbooks. You are not just a number, and we thank you for helping us see you.

  continue reading

44 episodes

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