• Black Women Less Likely To Breast Feed Therefore At Higher Risk For Breast Cancer


    TUESDAY, Aug. 16 (HealthDay News) — Black women are more likely to have two or more children and are less likely to breast-feed, putting them at greater risk of developing a difficult-to-treat type of breast cancer, according to a new study.

    The study, published in the current issue of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, found the risk for hormone receptor-negative breast cancer was 50 percent greater among women who gave birth to at least two children. The researchers noted, however, that breast-feeding reduced that risk.

    “African American women are more likely to have had a greater number of full-term births and less likely to have breast-fed their babies,” Julie Palmer, professor of epidemiology at the Slone Epidemiology Center at Boston University, said in a news release from the American Association for Cancer Research. “This study shows a clear link between that and hormone receptor-negative breast cancer.”

    The research was based on the Black Women’s Health Study, which has followed 59,000 African American women since 1995. The study authors analyzed medical information on 457 of the women with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer as well as 318 women who developed hormone receptor-negative breast cancer.

    In contrast, higher birth rates decreased the women’s risk for estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer, the study found. For those women, researchers found no link between breast-feeding and their risk for the disease.

    “The adverse effect of high childbirth without subsequent breast-feeding seems to be confined to the hormone receptor-negative breast cancer, which carries a higher mortality rate and is more common in African Americans,” concluded Palmer.

    SOURCE: American Association for Cancer Research, news release, Aug. 16, 2011

    HealthDay

    Many Black Women Prone to Gene-Driven Breast Cancer
    In an attempt to better understand the genetics of breast cancer, new research suggests that about 20 percent of black women with the disease have an abnormality on at least one of 18 genes previously linked to breast cancer vulnerability.
    Black Prostate Cancer Patients More Likely To Delay Treatment
    Black men with prostate cancer wait a bit longer to begin treatment following their diagnosis than white men, a new study shows.
    Social Stress And Black Women’s Health: A ‘Rejection Connection’?
    Faced with the issues of disparaging images in the media, colorism, growing inequities of college and grad school graduation rates between Black males and females, a growing shortage of marriage-minded (and marriage-worthy) Black men, and trying to have a healthy attitude about relationships and sex in a community plagued by men “on the down-low,” Black women face formidable odds.
    Minority Cancer Awareness: Everyday Steps To Help Lower Your Risk
    Every April the American Cancer Society and other organizations work together to raise awareness about cancer among minorities in honor of National Minority Health Month and National Minority Cancer Awareness Week, celebrated this year April 15-21.
    Breast Cancer Death Rates Higher for Black Women
    Black breast cancer patients are more likely to die than white patients, regardless of the type of cancer, according to a new study.
    Hair Loss and Men’s Health – Prostate Cancer
    In a brand new study from the University of Pennsylvania, researchers were able to make a connection between baldness and increased risk of prostate cancer among African-American men.
    Black Breast Cancer Survivors Face Higher Heart Failure Risk
    Black breast cancer survivors seem more likely to develop heart failure than other women, a new study says.
    Cancer Rates Dropping Among Black Americans
    A new report finds that cancer rates among blacks in the United States are on the decline, especially among black men, and the improvement may have saved almost 200,000 people from dying of the disease since the early 1990s.
    Video Showcase – Steve Harvey Undergoes A Colonoscopy
    Steve Harvey creates a video chronicling his colonoscopy experience to inform African American men and women that cancer is not a death sentence and can be prevented or cured if caught early.
    African American Men And Prostate Cancer: Be Your Own Advocate And Understand Screening
    For reasons that are still unknown, African American men are more likely to get prostate cancer than men from other racial/ethnic groups. They are also twice as likely to die from prostate cancer as other men.
    Cancer Fact Or Fiction: Separating Myths From Good Information
    To many, cancer remains one of the most frightening diagnoses in modern medicine. But much of this fear is a result of myths that have circulated for years in spite of the good information that is available.
    Genetic Link To Prostate Cancer Found In Europeans, African-Americans
    African-American and European men have an increased risk of prostate cancer due to changes in one of their immune system genes, claims a new study published online in the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention.
    Racial Disparities Still Seen In Use Of Breast Cancer Treatments
    Black women with breast cancer are less likely than their white peers to benefit from improved surgical techniques used to treat their disease, according to a new study.
    Oprah Winfrey Reveals Breast Cancer Scare
    The media queen took the stage in mid-October at an annual conference in Los Angeles for O, The Oprah Magazine, and revealed to more than 5,000 fans that the week before she had thought she might have breast cancer.
    Black Women Have Higher Death Rates From Breast Cancer Than Other Women
    Breast cancer deaths are going down the fastest among white women compared to women of other races and ethnicities. Black women have the highest death rates of all racial and ethnic groups and are 40% more likely to die of breast cancer than white women.
    Black Breast Cancer Patients May Have Higher Death Risk in First 3 Years
    Black women with breast cancer are much more likely to die within three years of diagnosis than white women with the disease, researchers have found.
    Aspirin May Fight Some Colon Cancers
    One of the world’s oldest and cheapest drugs is showing promise in fighting cancer. A new study has shown patients who regularly took aspirin lived longer than those who didn’t. These individuals had a mutation in a gene that’s thought to play a role in colon cancer.
    Race, Income Tied To Late Colon Cancer Diagnoses
    A study from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas also revealed that blacks and those in high-poverty areas are more likely than others to be diagnosed with colon cancer in an emergency situation. The researchers noted when cancer diagnoses are delayed until an emergency arises, the risk for complications and death increases.
    New Wonder Bra That Can Detect Cancer In Its Early Stages
    The makers of the First Warning Systems bra claim it can detect cancer in its earliest stages by continually monitoring the breasts for temperature changes associated with growing tumors.
    Multivitamins May Lower Cancer Risk In Men, Study Suggests
    A new study has found multivitamins modestly lowered the risk of cancer in healthy male doctors who took them for more than a decade.
    Breast Cancer: New Findings Could Lead To More Effective Treatments
    The new finding offers hints that one type of breast cancer might be vulnerable to drugs that already work against ovarian cancer.
    Radiation May Spike Up Breast Cancer Risk
    Mammograms aimed at finding breast cancer might actually raise the chances of developing it in young women whose genes put them at higher risk for the disease, a study by leading European cancer agencies suggests.
    Race May Affect Quality of Prostate Cancer Surgical Care
    Black prostate cancer patients may receive lower-quality surgical care than white patients, according to a new study.
    Race Determines A Patients’ Prostate Surgery Quality
    Black men needing surgery for advanced prostate cancer seem to have worse outcomes than white men, according to a new study.
    Surviving Cancer, Eating Well
    Moving Forward is a six-month cognitive-behavioral community-based weight loss intervention that was developed in collaboration with AA BC survivors.
    Blacks With Throat Cancer Get Harsher Therapy
    Blacks in the U.S. with throat cancer are more likely than whites to have surgery that leaves them unable to speak than to get gentler voice-preserving treatments, a new study finds.
    Colorectal Cancer Is Preventable: Information For African Americans
    Many people who fear cancer don’t realize that some types of cancer are preventable. Cancer of the colon or rectum (together referred to as colorectal cancer) is one of these.
    Minorities Now Surpass Whites In US Births, Census Shows
    America hit a demographic milestone last year, with new census figures showing for the first time more than half the children born in the U.S. were minorities.
    Health Care Disparities Might Affect Black Kids’ Cancer Survival
    Equal access to health care would reduce the disparity in survival rates between white and black children with cancer, a new study suggests.
    Black Women More Likely To Die Of Breast Cancer
    More than 1,700 black women die of breast cancer every year in the United States because of racial disparities in cancer risks and access to care, suggests a new study.
    U.S. Blacks More Likely To Die Of Colon Cancer Than Whites
    Although colorectal cancer death rates in the United States have fallen across the board over the last 20 years, the dip has been smaller among blacks than whites, a new study indicates.
    Fewer Dying in U.S. From Throat, Mouth Cancer, Study Finds
    Death rates for U.S. patients with throat and mouth cancers decreased between 1993 and 2007, a new study shows.
    Downsides Of Cancer Care Rarely Seen In Black Media
    Few media stories on cancer venture into issues of death, dying and end-of-life care — and outlets directed at African Americans are particularly unlikely to do so, a new study suggests.
    Higher Risk Of Second Breast Cancer Seen In Black Women
    Black women who develop breast cancer are more likely than white women to suffer a second cancer in the other breast, and those who are diagnosed under age 45 are more likely to get a primary breast cancer of a more aggressive form, new research indicates.
    Genes May Explain Blacks’ Bleaker Prostate Cancer Stats
    Differences in the genetic makeup of prostate cells could explain why black men in the United States are more likely to get prostate cancer and die from it than white men, a new study suggests.
    Actor Hill Harper Battling Thyroid Cancer
    Actor Hill Harper is battling thyroid cancer. Harper says he noticed something was wrong while filming Tyler Perry’s “For Colored Girls” last summer in Atlanta.
    Black Women Least Likely to Breast-Feed In U.S.
    Researchers found that while more than 80 percent of Hispanic mothers attempt to breast-feed, and about 74 percent of white moms do, that number falls to 54 percent for black mothers. And one year after delivery, only about 12 percent of black women are still breast-feeding their child as recommended, compared to 24 percent of Hispanic women and more than 21 percent of white women.
    Black Women In U.S. Comfortable With Formula Feeding
    Black women were as comfortable as women of other races with the idea of breast-feeding their baby. However, black women were far more comfortable with the idea of formula feeding their baby than other women were, and it’s this attitude that likely explains why black women are much less likely to breast-feed, the study authors noted.
    8 Natural Ways to Prevent Breast Cancer
    To prevent breast cancer you need to take action. Otherwise, your odds of getting breast cancer, the disease women fear the most, are 1 in 8.
    Black Women Wait Longer For Breast Cancer Diagnosis, Treatment
    Insured black women and uninsured white women waited more than twice as long to be given a definitive breast cancer diagnosis than insured white women…..
    Breast Cancer Stats Differ Racially Despite Similar Mammogram Rates
    Black women are 30 percent to 90 percent more likely to be diagnosed with advanced breast cancer than white women, researchers report.
    Breast Cancer More Lethal In Blacks, Reason Unknown
    It is still a mystery why black women are more likely to die from breast cancer than whites, according to a new study that shows the racial disparity can’t be chalked up to obesity differences.
    Black Men Are At A Higher Risk For Prostate Cancer
    Men of African-American descent are at a significantly higher risk of developing prostate cancer than white men. Among black men, 19 percent — nearly one in five — will be diagnosed with prostate cancer, and five percent of those will die from this disease…..
    Blacks Still Dying More From Cancer Than Whites
    Breast and colon cancers are deadlier for black women than they are for white women. Blacks also have a worse five-year survival rate than whites for all cancers—57 percent compared to 66 percent, according to the report.
    Cancer Disparities Exist Despite Good Insurance
    Despite having equal access to health care through military health insurance, black women with breast cancer are less likely than white women to receive certain aggressive treatments, according to the findings of a new study.
    Skin Cancer: A Fact Of Life In Skin Of Color
    People of all races and colors get skin cancer. This common cancer develops in people of African, Asian, Latino, and Native American descent. Even Aboriginal Australians have heard the diagnosis, “You have skin cancer.” When skin cancer develops in skin of color, the cancer is more often advanced by the time it is diagnosed. Researchers are not sure why. It could be that the cancer is not recognized until the later stages in skin of color.
    Liver Cancer Survival Rates May Be Worse for Blacks
    Black Americans with early-stage liver cancer are more likely to die of the disease than Asian, Hispanic or white patients, say researchers.
    Health Care Gap May Raise Rates Of Colorectal Cancer Death in Blacks
    Unequal health care may explain why black colorectal cancer patients have a much higher death rate than white patients, a new U.S. study suggests.
    African Americans Disproportionately Affected By Lung Cancer
    Despite similar smoking rates, African Americans are more likely to develop and die from lung cancer than white Americans, according to a new report from the American Lung Association (ALA)…
    Are You At Risk For Oral Cancer? What African American Men Need To Know
    African American men are one of the groups at highest risk for oral cancer but many don’t know it.
    Minorities And Colorectal Cancer
    African-Americans and Hispanics are more likely than non-Hispanic Whites to be diagnosed with colorectal cancer in later stages of the disease. Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer among both African-American men and women.
    Blacks With Cancer More Inclined To Exhaust Funds To Prolong Life
    White patients with lung or colorectal cancer are less willing than patients of other races or ethnicities to use up their personal financial resources to prolong their life, a new study finds.