More
Hispanic Texans die from cancer than any other cause, according to a new report
by the Comparative Effectiveness Research on Cancer in Texas research group.
The
report documents cancer as the leading cause of death among Hispanic Texans
under the age of 76. Only three percent of Hispanic Texans are older than 75.
Texas's
Hispanic population has more than doubled since 1990. Texans of Hispanic
ethnicity now comprise 38 percent of the state's population.
The
findings are published in a September 2013 special issue of the Texas Public
Health Journal, available online at http://txcercit.org/.
Based
on data from the Texas Cancer Registry, Medicare claims records and state vital
statistics, researchers compared rates and trends for cancer in Hispanics to
those for non-Hispanic whites in Texas. Key findings include:
These
findings were based on 10 years of data about the diagnoses of new cancer cases
and 21 years of data about cancer deaths.
The
CERCIT researchers noted one puzzling contradiction. Even though cancers tend
to be more advanced when diagnosed in Hispanics, death rates were lower than in
the white population. This phenomenon, known as the Hispanic Paradox, has been
noted before by other researchers looking at disease and survival rates across
the spectrum. Hispanic Americans tend to survive illness and live longer than
white Americans with the same diseases even though the Hispanics have less
education, income and access to health care.
Foreign-born
Hispanics had lower mortality rates than those born in the United States,
according to analyses of regional differences within the state.
My mother found the solution to cancer on the website:
ReplyDeleteadvisercancer-diseases.com
Hugs,
John