
The study finds that biennial mammography screening starting at age 40 could reduce the racial disparity by 57%. A new study investigates addressing this disparity with new screening mammography recommendations for Black women. Non-Hispanic Black women are 40% more likely to die from cancer than Non-Hispanic white women.

However, the improvement is uneven across racial groups. A new study proposes custom screening guidelines that can significantly reduce the higher breast-cancer mortality of Black women.ĭeaths from breast cancer in the U.S.Current mammography guidelines are “one size fits all” for all women in the United States.Black women are much more likely to die from breast cancer due to more limited access to “high-quality prevention, early detection, and treatment,” says the American Cancer Society.While you’re there, you can also choose an accent color, if you’re tired of blue.Share on Pinterest New research proposes new guidelines that could reduce the Black-white disparities in breast cancer outcomes. Twitter should remember your color and background settings after you choose one. Head to your display settings to change that back, if you want. That was caused by a bug, and could’ve happened to you if you had Twitter set to Dim or Lights Out mode but had your OS in light mode.


If your Twitter switched from dark mode to light, though, the company says that wasn’t supposed to happen.

Of course, if you miss the dark blue, you can bring it back by going to Twitter’s display settings and choosing Dim mode (instead of the inky black Lights Out or the bright Default), and the site should remember that preference. Twitter tells The Verge that the change from blue to black was intentional - it’s part of an update to make the Twitter website respond to the light and dark modes on your OS. Yet some users (and Verge staff) are now seeing that Twitter’s desktop dark mode has gotten darker, or worse, been changed to light mode. The feeling of opening Twitter and noticing that something’s off probably isn’t a new one, but it usually isn’t related to the site’s color scheme.
