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View Full Version : Breast cancer in AA's is rising faster than other ethnicgrps


generaltojo
Oct 27th, 2004, 05:36 PM
From scaa:

http://ucnewswire.org/news_viewer.cfm?story_PK=4269&

Tuesday, October 26, 2004
University of California Davis Medical Center

Breast cancer in Asian Americans is rising faster than other ethnic groups

But cancer incidence and mortality are dropping for Asian Americans overall

The incidence of cancer among Asian Americans in California has dropped 5.9 percent and deaths from the disease have dropped 16.3 percent since 1988. Both declines are more rapid than those seen in any of the other major ethnic groups, according to research reported today at the 5th Asian American Cancer Control Academy. The meeting is sponsored by the National Cancer Institute and its Asian American Network for Cancer Awareness, Research and Training (AANCART), headquartered at UC Davis.

However, Asian American women remain more likely to die of cancer than of any other cause. And, while they are less likely than women in any other major ethnic group to develop breast cancer, their breast cancer rate is the nation's fastest-growing.

The findings come from a new analysis by the Cancer Surveillance Section of the California Department of Health Services. California has the largest Asian population in the nation at 3.7 million people, or 35 percent of the entire Asian population in the United States. The new study examined cancer incidence and mortality from 1988 through 2001, the latest year for which statistics are available.

"We're encouraged by these data, but we hope that this report will serve as a clarion to urge Asian American women, who are the least likely to seek cancer screening such as mammograms, to look out for their health," said Moon S. Chen, Jr., professor of public health sciences at UC Davis School of Medicine and Medical Center. Chen is principal investigator for AANCART, an $8.5 million project to reduce cancer in Asian Americans nationwide.

While cancer incidence and mortality fell for Asian Americans as a whole, the good news wasn't shared equally across Asian American communities.

Korean Americans saw only a 0.2 percent drop in their cancer incidence during the study period, the lowest for any of the five Asian subgroups studied -- Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese. And Filipino Americans, alone among the Asian American subgroups, saw a 2.5-percent increase in their death rate from cancer.

"These findings underscore the tremendous heterogeneity among Asian Americans, and the importance of looking at each Asian ethnic group separately," said Chen, who also serves as a Bush appointee to the President's Cancer Advisory Board. "California's large and diverse Asian population makes this state a logical and ideal place to understand the burden of cancer among Asian subgroups and Asians as a whole."

According to Chen, the increase in breast cancer seen in Asian American women may be due to increased awareness of breast cancer among Asian women and their physicians, as well as to Westernization, which Chen defines as "behaviors that are still difficult to quantify but represent qualitatively different actions than those in traditional Asia."

AANCART is the largest project ever undertaken to reduce cancer in Asian Americans. Headquartered at UC Davis, it includes researchers from seven other institutions: Harvard, Columbia, the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center at the University of Texas, the University of Washington, UCLA, UC San Francisco and the University of Hawaii.

The 5th Asian Cancer Control Academy is sponsored by the National Cancer Institute, the U.S. Office of Minority Health, Region IX, AANCART, the California Department of Health Services, the American Cancer Society and UC Davis.

cattygurl
Nov 22nd, 2004, 06:05 AM
SAD (Standard American Diet- meaning soda, big macs and french fries) fucks everyone. I've read several studies that link diet with increase of breast cancer in Asian women- those adopting a more "American" diet (more meat, less veggies, more junk food, less whole foods) tend to increase their risks for heart attack, diabetes, and cancer pretty significantly.

cattygurl
Nov 22nd, 2004, 06:53 AM
A healthy, varied diet full of veggies, fruits, complex carbs (not simple sugars and refined carbs, yo), healthy fats (avoid hydrogenated trans-fats, deep fried foods, choose olive oil/ grapeseed for cooking) and moderate amounts of high quality protein (go for organic when you can- avoid processed meats as much as possible, and choose lean cuts when you can) coupled with moderate exercise is one of the most imp[ortant things a person can do to stay healthy.

Also, know your family history and get frequent testing for diseases that run in your family.

Taliesin Stormheller
Nov 22nd, 2004, 06:58 PM
This is what happens when decent Asian folks eat that greasy American shiznit instead of good food like TOFU and Asian Salads which I am going downstairs to eat in 2 seconds...

AngryEthiopian
Nov 22nd, 2004, 07:20 PM
This is what happens when decent Asian folks eat that greasy American shiznit instead of good food like TOFU and Asian Salads which I am going downstairs to eat in 2 seconds...
We were raised on tofu and vegetable protien and had to flee social services because they would (at that time, back in the day) call this child abuse and take your children away if you didn't feed them meat and Jack in the Crack or McDiarrhea.