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All About Black Health Selected Quote: "We are highly committed to reducing the disparities that exist among African Americans, but we realize we cannot do it alone,"said Kevin Fenton, M.D., Ph.D., Director of the CDC's National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention at a meeting of more than 100 African-American leaders held in Atlanta on March 7-8 2007 in Atlanta.
 

                             

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GENERAL HEALTH (1) 

Prognosis Grim for Poor Minorities

By Tom Maccabe (reprinted with permission from The Medical Herald, Vol.13, No.2,                                       March 2001)

Dramatic new surges in both legal and illegal immigration, combined with the long-standing                                 health crises of minority populations, are being ignored while Washington appears ready to                                    favor such popular issues as prescription drug benefits for the elderly and a patients bill of rights.  

The consequences for minorities are so grave that even the minimal progress made during the                                   last few decades by long-time African-American, Native American and Latino residents threatens                               to be reversed.

That is the gloomy prognosis gathered by The Medical Herald in interviews with scores of health                              care experts about their work monitoring the pending initiatives of both the Bush administration                                and the Congress...( NEXT...)


Why are African Americans so vulnerable to cancer?  

By Jean F. Gibbs

According to a 1998 report by the American Cancer Society, NCI, and the Centers for Disease                             Control and Prevention, U.S. cancer incidence and death rates, for all cancers combined and for                            most of the leading cancer sites, declined by 0.7% and 0.5% respectively between 1990 and 1995,                   reversing a nearly 20-year trend of increasing incidence and death rates.

Yet, cancer continues to disproportionately affect blacks. Why do African Americans get cancer                           more often, and why are they more likely to die from it?

According to surveys done by health professionals who have worked with the National Black                            Leadership Initiative on Cancer (sponsored by the Morehouse School of Medicine and the National                            Cancer Institute), many African Americans are not aware of the major warning signs of cancer. 

 In addition, African Americans are less likely to participate in screening programs capable of                           detecting early curable cancers.  This non participation is often seen in the poor and uninsured                     communities.  For example, fewer black women -- as compared with white women -- have an                               annual Pap smear, and as a result twice as many black women die of cervical cancer than whites.                            This is also true for prostate cancer in African American men despite the existence of the screening                          test known as PSA, which may help in the early detection of the disease.  

Less nutritious diet and limited access to health care due to a low income have been blamed by                             many health experts as causes of cancer in African Americans.  This low income may also means                         less access to information.  Now that the Internet is considered as a very important source of                          information about health, diseases and healthy lifestyles, only 23.5% of the African American                        population had Internet access at home in 2000 while white households accounted for 46.1%                              during the same year ( Numbers from : U.S. Dept. of Commerce's National Telecommunication                              and Information Administration). 

African Americans are exposed to more cancer causing agents (carcinogens) than whites are.                                For example, more than half of blacks live within the boundaries of polluted cities, and many live                               close to major expressways, in industrial areas or close to toxic dump sites.

As it relates to occupational hazards or cancer-causing jobs, African Americans seem to carry                                the burden.  Generally speaking, a significant proportion of blacks have always held the most                             toxically dangerous industrial jobs, which expose them to unusually high amounts of carcinogens.

To a significant degree, cancer is related to an individual's eating, drinking, smoking habits, and                          lifestyle.  Health experts believe that about 35% of cancer death can be related to foods that we                       consume: high-fat diets, or diet with too little fiber.  And obesity is believed to increase both breast                            and cervical cancers.

In dealing with the problem of cancer in African Americans, public health experts need to take into                      account the various factors mentioned earlier.  But as individuals, we should try all the times to                           reduce our risk of getting cancer by avoiding those factors known to cause cancer.  We also need                             to protect ourselves according to established norms if we believe our jobs constitute a risk to our                          health and well-being. 

(Reviewed by Carl Gilbert, M.D.)                  

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