2008 Cancer Health Disparities Summit
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Brief Description:
The National Cancer Institute's Center to Reduce Cancer Health
Disparities hosted the 2008 Cancer Health Disparities Summit.
Transcript:
Akinso: The National Cancer Institute's Center
to Reduce Cancer Health Disparities hosted the 2008 Cancer Health
Disparities Summit.
Warne: The theme this year is eliminating cancer
health disparities through science, training, and community.
Akinso: Dr. Donald Warne is the Health Policy
Research Director for Intertribal Council of Arizona and a NCI
grantee.
Underwood: Most of the topics discussed are
around the top 5 cancers that have the highest disparity issues.
Akinso: Dr. Willie Underwood is an Assistant
Professor in the Department of Urology at Wayne State University
of Medicine and also a NCI grantee.
Underwood: One is prostate cancer, secondly
is lung and bronchus cancer, breast cancer, colorectal cancer,
and pancreatic cancer.
Akinso: The Summit was held from July 14th–July
16th. It highlighted the science of the programs and grantees
funded through the Center to Reduce Cancer Health Disparities.
Dr. Underwood talks about the impact of cancer health disparities
in the African American community.
Underwood: We know that deaths from all cancers
combined for both men and women are high among blacks. African
American women who are diagnosed with breast cancer are less
likely than white women to survive five years after diagnosis.
The rate among African American women is 71 percent compared
to 86 percent and that's for survival of breast cancer for whites.
African American males have far higher death rates of prostate
cancer, 2.4 times higher. The incidences of colorectal cancer
among African American women are higher than that among whites.
Lung cancer is the leading cause of death for African Americans
when you look at cancers death.
Akinso: Dr. Warne talks about how it impacts
the Native American community.
Warne: If you look nationally our most common
cancers are lung, bronchus cancer, but also prostate, colon rectum
cancer, kidney and renal pelvis cancer and stomach cancer. But
we see tremendous variation. Some regions of the country have
much lower rates of one cancer than others primarily due the
rates of cigarette smoking.
Akinso: Dr. Warne explains how this summit
benefits Native Americans and other groups.
Warne: One of the major benefits of the summit
is to find out what other populations are doing. I think that
projects like ours-that is a community network program. We will
benefit tremendously by learning what other programs are doing,
what other populations are doing, what other communities are
doing. And when we share information in a forum like this we
learn from each other and perhaps there's templates of projects
or even ideas that we haven't though about that we can try to
implement in Indian country.
Akinso: Both Dr. Warne and Dr. Underwood cite
that the goal of the summit was to enhance mutually beneficial
interactions among the Center to Reduce Cancer Health Disparities
programs by sharing scientific knowledge, encouraging junior
investigators, and broadening community participation. This is
Wally Akinso at the National Institutes of Health Bethesda, Maryland.