[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 109 (Thursday, July 19, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5202-S5203]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING ST. BERNARD HOSPITAL
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, for the past several years much of the
conversation about health care in Washington has been a war of words.
Today I would like to talk about a hospital in my home State that is
seeking to better the lives of the women in its community, not simply
with words but with action.
This month, St. Bernard Hospital in the Englewood neighborhood in
Chicago, announced it would provide 150 free mammograms for women. The
mammograms will be for women who are over the age of 40 and do not have
health insurance.
For those who may not know, Englewood is a neighborhood in Chicago
that struggles with high levels of crime and unemployment.
The mammograms will be offered as part of the Metropolitan Chicago
Breast Cancer Task Force's ``Screen to Live'' initiative. The Task
Force was created in 2007, after a landmark study by the Sinai Urban
Health Institute found that the mortality rate from breast cancer for
African American women in Chicago was 68 percent higher than white
women.
That startling statistic is not unique to Chicago.
According to the American Cancer Society, African American women
nationally have the lowest survival rate from breast cancer of any
racial or ethnic group. Not surprisingly, the study found poverty and a
lack of health insurance are also associated with lower breast cancer
survival.
It is this disparity that led St. Bernard President and CEO, Sister
Elizabeth Van Straten, to offer the mammograms. St. Bernard Hospital is
not a wealthy hospital. But this gift of 150 free mammograms to the
community will save lives. And this partnership between St. Bernard's
and the Metropolitan Chicago Breast Cancer Task Force should be
applauded.
This brings me to the Affordable Care Act.
The lesson to learn from St. Bernard's effort is that preventive care
matters. Because survival often hinges on early detection, the
Affordable Care Act has made preventive services free. In fact 54
million Americans, including 2.4 million in Illinois have received
preventive services from their insurance company at no cost. In 2011,
1.3 million people on Medicare in Illinois received free preventive
services. And starting next year, States will receive an increased
share from the Federal Government to cover preventive services for
people on Medicaid.
This effort to bring preventive services to millions of Americans
across the country will no doubt save lives.
I want to acknowledge the outstanding people at St. Bernard's and
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the Metropolitan Chicago Breast Cancer Task Force who made this happen.
I am proud to be their Senator.
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