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TOBACCO LINKED TO 63 PERCENT OF CANCER
DEATH BURDEN AMONG AFRICAN-AMERICAN MEN
New study shows black males in the South
suffer greatest burden
June 13, 2005
(SACRAMENTO, Calif.)
— A new analysis links tobacco smoke to
63 percent of cancer deaths among African-American men in the
United States. The smoke-related cancer death burden for African-American
men is highest in the South at 67 percent, with the lowest burden
— 43 percent — in the Northeast. The percentage is
60 in the West and 63 in the Midwest.
The study, authored by Bruce Leistikow, associate professor in
the Department of Public Health Sciences at the UC
Davis School of Medicine and Medical Center, appears online
now and will be published in the August issue of Preventive
Medicine, published by Elsevier. To receive the full article,
e-mail newsroom@elsevier.com.
In research published last year, Leistikow estimated that more
than 38 percent of cancer deaths for African-American men were
related to tobacco smoke. His new study uses additional years
of National Center for Health Statistics data to refine that analysis.
He now also separately analyzes data for each U.S. Census region.
Leistikow notes one explanation for regional differences could
be intervention disparities. Western and Northeastern states have
some of the strongest tobacco control programs in the nation,
while Southern and Midwestern states have been slower to initiate
such increasingly common policies as higher cigarette taxes, smoke-free
spaces, anti-smoking education programs and penalties for selling
tobacco to minors.
“There is a lot of confusion about what causes the worst
cancers — those that destroy families by ending lives prematurely.
This study clarifies that the best explanation for most premature
cancer deaths for African-American males is tobacco smoke exposure,
whether from secondhand or active smoking. It helps estimate regional
and previously overlooked burdens of tobacco smoke inhalation,”
Leistikow said. “The study also provides further evidence
that deaths can be reduced by applying the right policy tools.”
African-American men have the highest cancer death rate of any
gender-ethnic group in the United States. Free support for quitting
smoking is available by calling 1-800-QUIT-NOW, the national Smokers’
Helpline. Other sources of assistance include www.nobutts.org,
www.quitnet.com, www.smokefree.gov, the American Cancer Society
at (800) 227-2345 and the American Lung Association at (800) 586-4872.
Those groups, along with the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids and
Americans for Nonsmokers’ Rights, also educate policymakers
and the general public on the benefits of tobacco smoke-free air.
The UC
Davis Cancer Center is the only National Cancer Institute-designated
cancer center serving inland Northern California. It is ranked
by U.S. News & World Report as one of the nation’s top
50 cancer treatment centers.
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Media Contact |
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Karen
Finney
Medical News Office,
(916) 734-9064 |
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