Sunday, March 9, 2008

Black Women Have Higher Death Rates From Breast Cancer

Black women in Houston, Texas, have a 45% greater mortality rate from breast cancer than white women, according to a new study, the Houston Chronicle reports (Ackerman, Houston Chronicle, 24).

The study was presented at the Avon Foundation Breast Cancer Forum, which took place this month in Houston. Steve Whitman, director of the -=-->http://www.suhichicago.org/, led the study, which is similar to research he did on black women and breast cancer in Chicago (Avon Foundation release, 25).

According to the Houston study, for every 100,000 women, 40.8 black women and 28.2 white women died from breast cancer in 2004. In 2000, 34.3 black women and 30.4 white women for every 100,000 women died from breast cancer.

Whitman said that the study suggests that the disparity is related to access to care, including mammography and treatment. He added, The racial disparity in breast cancer mortality rates in Houston, like elsewhere, is a symptom of a broken health care system. The system delivers the benefits of recent advances in breast cancer treatment to white women, but not black women.

In response to the study's findings, local health experts are starting a task force, which will study the issue for about a year and then issue recommendations. The task force also will decide whether to expand the study to look at death rates from breast cancer among Asians and Hispanics, according to task force leader Lovell Jones, director of the Center for Research on Minority Health at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. Jones said, Knowing the city, I expected these sort of figures. I'm more curious about what's accounted for the fluctuations in the rates over the years (Houston Chronicle, 24).

Reprinted with permission from kaisernetwork.org. You can view the entire Kaiser Weekly Health Disparities Report, search the archives, and sign up for email delivery at kaisernetwork.orgemail. The Kaiser Weekly Health Disparities Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a free service of The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. © 2007 Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.

Article From : emaxhealth.com

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