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Migration-Informed Cancer Equity: A Global Perspective Cover

Migration-Informed Cancer Equity: A Global Perspective

By:   
Open Access
|May 2026

Abstract

Health equity is now a central aim of modern medicine, yet US cancer-prevention frameworks remain largely shaped by domestic policy histories and nationally bounded conceptions of disparity. While essential for addressing longstanding racial inequities, these frameworks often overlook malignancies driven by infection, geography, and early-life exposure—risks that are well characterized in global cancer epidemiology but imperfectly translated into domestic prevention strategies. As migration reshapes disease distribution, this misalignment leaves persistent gaps in the prevention of cancers such as gastric, liver, and cervical cancer among immigrant and diaspora populations. This perspective advances a migration-informed approach to cancer equity that integrates nativity, early-life exposure, and transnational determinants into prevention design. Using gastric cancer as a case study, we show how omission of migration-linked risk contributes to systematic under-recognition of high-risk populations in low-incidence countries, despite strong global evidence for effective prevention. Achieving meaningful cancer equity in the twenty-first century will require frameworks that extend beyond national borders and reflect how cancer risk is distributed in an increasingly mobile world.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/aogh.5189 | Journal eISSN: 2214-9996
Language: English
Page range: 48 - 48
Submitted on: Jan 25, 2026
Accepted on: May 7, 2026
Published on: May 26, 2026
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2026 Chul S. Hyun, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.