Officials hope reduction in Ky. colon cancer deaths via screening can be replicated with lung cancer, in which state is No. 1

Health
officials in Kentucky, especially in the eastern part of the state, hope to increase
lung-cancer screenings by following a successful colon-cancer screening initiative, Jackie Judd reports for PBS NewsHour. (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention graphic: Colon-cancer screenings are up)

In rural Eastern Kentucky, smoking and lung cancer rates are double the national average, while the state is second in adult smoking rates and leads the nation in lung cancer and rates of death from it.
That is “fueled by a toxic combination of
poverty, medical illiteracy, limited access to care, lifestyle choices
like smoking, and a fatalism that says knowing you have cancer won’t
save you.”

Another challenge is that local bans of smoking in public places have left two-thirds of residents living in areas with no such bans, and a statewide ban seems unlikely because it failed to pass the state House this year after narrowly passing last year. New Republican Gov. Matt Bevin opposes a statewide ban.

Fifteen
years ago Kentucky led the nation in “both the highest incidence and
mortality rates for colorectal cancer,” Allison Perry reports for University of Kentucky News.
Rural residents didn’t seek care, partly because of a lack of
facilities and partly because of a refusal to schedule an appointment.
If local residents wouldn’t seek care, health officials decided to bring
care to local residents.

“In the seven years following
this new focus on colorectal cancer, the screenings rates nearly
doubled, from 34.7 percent of the age-eligible population receiving
screenings to 63.7 percent,” Perry writes. “This raised Kentucky’s rank
from 49th in the country to 23rd compared to other states. No other
state has had such a dramatic increase in colorectal screenings in such a
short period of time. As a result, the lives of many Kentuckians have
been saved: the incidence rate for colorectal cancer is down nearly 25
percent, and the mortality rate has dropped 30 percent. Through
colorectal screenings, doctors can find precancerous lesions and remove
them before they become cancer. Screenings also allow physicians to find
these cancers at an earlier stages, when they are more likely to
respond to treatment.”

The number of cancer screenings jumped in 2014 and 2015, as the state expanded eligibility for the Medicaid program under federal health reform, making many more people eligible for free screenings. Bevin is seeking change the state’s program in ways that could require co-payments, premiums and deductibles.

In
Kentucky “the challenge is to not only encourage certain lifelong
smokers to get
screened, but to get them to quit, and for others to never start,”
especially because of the addictive nature of smoking, Judd reports. “It
will be even more difficult than changing the profile of colon cancer,
because smoking involves addiction. The hope of public health officials
is that the model used to bring down colon cancer deaths can be used to
the same effect, not only for lung cancer, but for other diseases
plaguing this depressed swath of America.”

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