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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. That African American women are more likely to contract breast and/or cervical cancer is a well-documented fact. Overall, the comparison with Caucasian women reflects similar statistical findings nationwide for breast cancer, however, incidents of cervical cancer before age fifty are shown to be slightly higher than in their Caucasian counterparts. Where the figures really begin to divide by race, however, is when looking at the number of African American women actually die from breast or cervical cancer when compared to Caucasian women. Bibliography lists 17 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCcrvcl.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
reflects similar statistical findings nationwide for breast cancer, however, incidents of cervical cancer before age fifty are shown to be slightly higher than in their Caucasian counterparts. Where the
figures really begin to divide by race, however, is when looking at the number of African American women actually die from breast or cervical cancer when compared to Caucasian women.
Current statistics illustrate that African American women between the ages of fifty and fifty-four have a 70.9 percent chance per one hundred thousand of dying from breast cancer as
compared to a 49.6 percent chance for Caucasian women of the same age bracket. Moving up the scale shows a sharp increase in the percentage of Caucasian women between
the ages of sixty and sixty-four (81.1%) as compared with African American women in that age bracket (96.5%) per one hundred thousand. Overall, the American Cancer Society estimated nearly
two hundred thousand American women of all races would be diagnosed with breast cancer in the year 2001, with forty thousand of them succumbing from the disease (Greenlee et al,
2001). "When breast cancers are found at more advanced stages, it is more difficult to treat, and survival rates are lower" (The National Womens Health Information Center, 1998). Findings
from a recent National Cancer Institute study noted how African American women die twice as often from breast cancer as do Caucasian women. Moreover, myriad other studies have pointed
to the fact that breast cancer found in African American women presents as an entirely different composition than what is found in other groups, inasmuch as tumor size has become
a primary focal point. "One well-known fact about breast cancer is that more African American women are diagnosed with larger tumors and with spread of their breast cancer to
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