Do Race and Gender also Play a Role in Obesity and Cancer Screening ? Read more: Do Race and Gender also Play a Role in Obesity and Cancer Screening ?
A
study on the role of obesity in cancer screening rates for prostate,
cervical as well as breast and colorectal cancers across race/ethnicity
and gender is examined in the current issue of the Journal of Obesity.
Researchers in Family and Community Medicine at Thomas Jefferson
University recently found that obesity was linked to higher rates of
prostate cancer screening across all races/ethnic differences and lower
rates of cervical cancer screening, most notably in white women.
"Numerous studies have suggested that obesity constitutes an obstacle to
cancer screening, but a deeper examination also considering the role of
race/ethnicity and gender in the equation has not been done before,"
said Heather Bittner Fagan, MD, FAAFP MPH, lead author and associate
professor, Thomas Jefferson University and director of Health Services
Research, department of Family and Community Medicine, Christiana Care
Health System. "A greater understanding of the relationship between
cancer screening and obesity, race/ethnicity and gender can also help
explain the association between obesity and increased cancer mortality."
Obesity is second only to tobacco use as a risk factor for cancer and is
associated with increased mortality for all cancer combined as well as
for cancer of specific sites, including cancer of the colon/rectum,
prostate, breast, and cervix.
medindia.net
0 comments:
Post a Comment