[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 20 (Monday, February 2, 2009)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E172]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CERVICAL CANCER AWARENESS MONTH
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HON. ROSA L. DeLAURO
of connecticut
in the house of representatives
Monday, February 2, 2009
Ms. DeLAURO. Madam Speaker, I rise today to recognize January as
Cervical Cancer Awareness Month. According to the National Cancer
Institute, approximately 11,000 women are diagnosed with cervical
cancer each year in the U.S., resulting in nearly 3,900 deaths. At a
time when proven prevention tools are available, it is especially
tragic that any woman should die from this disease, yet cervical cancer
is the second most common cancer in women worldwide. Even for women who
survive this disease, it often causes a significant emotional burden
and can lead to early menopause and loss of fertility among women in
their child-bearing years. And it affects women of all ages: While the
majority of cervical cancers are detected in women between 35 and 64,
more than 30 percent of cases are diagnosed in women younger than 34
and women over 65.
Despite these sobering statistics, we have made significant progress
in this country in reducing the burden of cervical cancer. Since the
mid-20th century, deaths from cervical cancer have declined by an
estimated 70 percent, due to the Papanicolaou (Pap) screening test. In
1990, Congress created the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early
Detection Program to improve timely access to screening and diagnostic
services for low-income, uninsured, and underserved women. According to
the Centers for Disease Control, since 1991 NBCCEDP-funded programs
have diagnosed 2,161 invasive cervical cancers and 114,390 precursor
cervical lesions, of which 42 percent were high-grade. More recently,
researchers have identified HPV as the main cause of cervical cancer,
and an HPV vaccine and screening test have been developed.
The simple fact is that cervical cancer is almost completely
preventable through vaccinations, Pap testing, and testing for the
human papillomavirus (HPV). Yet, as with so many other diseases,
cervical cancer often strikes those who are least able to take
advantage of these tools: Those who have either never had a screening
test (either a Pap test alone, or in combination with an HPV test), or
have gone many years without one, are the most likely to be diagnosed
with cervical cancer. Unfortunately, in both the U.S. and around the
world, this means that poor women, and those who face barriers to
obtaining quality health care, are disproportionately affected by
cervical cancer. And the disparities are huge: Hispanic women are twice
as likely as white women to be diagnosed with cervical cancer, and
African-American women are twice as likely as white women to die of the
disease. Asian-Americans, Native Americans, and women in certain areas
of the U.S. are also at increased risk. Cervical cancer is an even
greater burden outside of this country, with about 500,000 women
diagnosed with cervical cancer every year, more than half of whom will
die from this preventable disease.
Let us redouble our commitment to ensuring that all women are
educated about cervical cancer and have access to proven screening and
diagnostic tools so that one January, we can look back and say that we
have won the fight against cervical cancer.
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