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Eliminate Disparities
in Cancer Screening & Management

What is the Burden of Cancer in the United States?
Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the United States, causing more than 500,000 deaths each year.1  The chances of having cancer in a lifetime are 45 percent for men2 and 41 percent for women.3  Almost half of all people who get cancer will die.4

Examples of Important Disparities
Although deaths caused by breast cancer have decreased among white women, African-American women continue to have higher rates of mortality from breast and cervical cancer.5 The disproportionate burden may be because many African-American women have not received regular mammograms or Papanicolaou (Pap) tests or follow-up treatment. Vietnamese women have an incidence rate of cervical cancer five times higher than white women.6 Limited access to health care services and language and cultural barriers are primary reasons for the low rates of screening and treatment for other minority groups, such as Hispanic or Latino, American Indian or Alaska Natives, Asian-American, and Pacific Islander women. Men in African-American populations also have more cancers of the lung, prostate, colon, and rectum than do white men.5  Overall, African Americans have more malignant tumors and are less likely to survive cancer than the general population.5

Promising Strategies
Modify lifestyles to reduce individual risk for cancer -- tobacco use, diet and nutrition -- and improve early detection. CDC and other public health agencies, health care providers, and communities of all racial and ethnic groups must become partners in a national effort to:

red triangle Improve early cancer detection through routine mammography, Pap tests and colorectal cancer screening;
red triangle Create additional public education campaigns; and
red triangle Develop research projects that will encourage minority groups to participate in clinical trials for cancer prevention to ensure that significant differences between minority and ethnic groups are identified.

Minority groups’ access to cancer care and clinical trials has been expanded to ensure that people in these communities are provided the same quality, access, and state-of-the-art technology that patients in major care centers receive.

What is the Health Care Provider’s Role to Help Reduce the Cancer Burden?
Because fear, cost, and lack of physician referral are three common barriers to cancer screening for women, health care providers play a critical role in increasing cancer screening. Physicians must address their patients’ fears by describing how screening saves lives.  Health care providers must communicate with their patients about low-cost or free cancer screening services like the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Cancer Early Detection Program. Because many women in minority populations have limited means or do not know how to access cancer treatment specialists, physicians must act as trusted referral sources.

What can Individuals do to Decrease Their Risk of Getting Cancer?
Although tobacco use is responsible for at least one-third of all cancer deaths,7 smoking cessation is only one way a person can choose to reduce the personal burden of cancer. Diet, weight control, and physical activity can in time reduce cancer incidence by 30-40%.8  Early detection is the best opportunity to reduce deaths; therefore, women at risk must make every effort to receive mammograms and Pap smears on a regular basis so breast and cervical cancer can be detected and treated. And persons at high risk for colorectal cancer should follow guidelines on periodic health evaluations.

Ask your doctor about the following cancer screening tests:

Women Men
Breast self exam Colonoscopy
Colonoscopy Digital rectal exam (DRE)
Mammogram Prostate specific antigen (PSA) test
Pap test Testicular self exam
Pelvic exam  

For more information about cancer:
  CDC Health Topic: Cancer
  National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention & Health Promotion (NCCDPHP) Cancer Prevention & Control
    National Cancer Data
    Minority Cancer Awareness
    The National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (BCCEDP)
    Colorectal Cancer
  NCCDPHP Tobacco Information & Prevention Source (TIPS)
    Cigarette Smoking-Related Mortality
  Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) Cancer Health Disparities Progress Review Group
    Making Cancer Health Disparities History
  National Cancer Institute (NCI)
    Center to Reduce Cancer Health Disparities
    Cancer Health Disparities
  World Health Organization (WHO) Cancer Page
  American Cancer Society (ACS)
  The Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation
  Five A Day The Color Way
 

Sources:

  1 National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), 2000.
  2 National Cancer Institute (NCI), 1999.
  3 NCI, 1999.
  4 American Cancer Society, Cancer Facts and Figures, 2003; p.2.
  5 ibid, p. 29.
  6 National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (NCCDPHP), 1999.
  7 NCI, 1999.
  8 American Institute for Cancer Research, 1997.


 

 

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Last Updated on November 03, 2004
Office of Minority Health

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