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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

OBAMA CANCER PLAN MUST PRIORITIZE PREVENTION, SAYS CANCER PREVENTION COALITION


CHICAGO, IL, January 23, 2009 --/WORLD-WIRE/-- President Barack Obama is the first President to develop a comprehensive cancer plan. While the plan reflects strong emphasis on oncology, the diagnosis and treatment of cancer, no reference is made to prevention. Yet, the more cancer that can be prevented, the less there is to treat.

President Obama’s cancer plan should emphasize the many avoidable causes of cancer.

The plan defines and coordinates the responsibilities of four federal agencies: the National Cancer Institute (NCI), for research and clinical trials; the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for epidemiological follow up and support of cancer survivors; the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, for funding cancer related care; and the FDA, for regulating cancer drugs.

In 1971, Congress passed the National Cancer Act which authorized the National Cancer Program, calling for “an expanded and intensified research program for the prevention of cancer caused by occupational or environmental exposures to carcinogens.” Shortly afterwards, President Richard Nixon announced his “War Against Cancer,” and authorized a $200 million budget for the NCI. Since then, its budget has escalated by nearly 30-fold, to $5.3 billion this year.

Meanwhile, the incidence of a wide range of cancers, other than those due to smoking, has escalated sharply from 1975 to 2005, when the latest NCI statistics were published. These include malignant melanoma (172%), Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (79%), thyroid (116%), testes (60%), and childhood cancers (38%).

In November 2008, the NCI claimed that the incidence of new cancers has been falling from 1999 to 2005. However, this is contrary to its own latest statistics. These show increases of 45% for thyroid cancer, 18% for malignant melanoma, 18% for kidney cancer, 10% for childhood cancers, and 4% for testes cancer.

Disturbingly, the NCI has still failed to develop, let alone publicize, any listing or registry of avoidable exposures to a wide range of carcinogens. These include: some pharmaceuticals; high dose diagnostic radiation; occupational; environmental; and ingredients in consumer products - food, household products, and cosmetics and personal care products.

The NCI has also failed to respond, other than misleadingly or dismissively, to prior Congressional requests for such information.

In March 1998, in a series of questions to then NCI Director Dr. Richard Klausner, Congressman David Obey requested information on NCI’s policies and priorities. He asked, “Should the NCI develop a registry of avoidable carcinogens and make this information widely available to the public?” The answer was, and remains, no.

Klausner’s responses made it clear that NCI persisted in indifference to cancer prevention, coupled with imbalanced emphasis on damage control - screening, diagnosis, treatment, and clinical trials.

Moreover, NCI’s claims for the success of “innovative treatment” have been sharply criticized by distinguished oncologists. In 2004, Nobelist Leland Hartwell, President of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Control Center, warned that “Congress and the public are not paying NCI $4.7 billion a year,” most of which is spent on “promoting ineffective drugs” for terminal disease.

It should be further emphasized that the costs of new biotech cancer drugs have increased more than 100-fold over the last decade. Furthermore, the U.S. spends five times more than the U.K. on chemotherapy per patient, although their survival rates are similar.

The Obama Cancer Plan is subject to Congressional authorization, and funding approval by the House and Senate Appropriations Committees. These committees will be in a position to require that major priority should be directed to cancer prevention rather than to oncology. Clearly, the more cancer is prevented, the less there is to treat. This will also be of major help in achieving Obama’s goal “to lower health care costs.”

Contact:
Samuel S. Epstein, M.D.
Professor emeritus Environmental & Occupational Medicine
University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health,
Chairman, Cancer Prevention Coalition
2121 West Taylor Street, MC 922
Chicago, IL 60612
312.996.2297
fax 312.413.9898 (include cover sheet)
e-mail epstein@uic.edu
web www.preventcancer.com

This release has been endorsed by 19 leading national experts in cancer prevention. They are:
    Nicholas A. Ashford, PhD, JD
    Professor of Technology and Policy
    Director, MIT Technology and Law Program
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Cambridge, Massachusetts

    Rosalie Bertell, PhD
    International Association for Humanitarian Medicine
    International Science Oversight Committee for the Organic Consumers Association
    Yardley, Pennsylvania

    James Brophy, PhD
    Adjunct Assistant Professor
    Department of Sociology and Anthropology
    Board of Directors, Toxic Free Canada
    University of Windsor
    Ontario, Canada

    Richard Clapp, D.Sc., MPH
    Professor
    Boston University School of Public Health
    Boston, Massachusetts

    Paul Connett, PhD
    Professor Emeritus of Environmental Chemistry,
    St. Lawrence University
    Canton, New York;
    Executive Director
    Fluoride Action Network
    Canton, New York

    Ronnie Cummins
    National Director
    Organic Consumers Association
    Finland, Minnesota

    Tracey Easthope, MPH
    Director, Environmental Health Project
    Ecology Center
    Ann Arbor, Michigan

    Lennart Hardell, MD, PhD
    Professor
    Department of Oncology
    University Hospital
    Örebro, Sweden

    Hazel Henderson, D.Sc.Hon., FRSA, author, futurist
    President, Ethical Markets Media, LLC;
    Co-Creator, the Calvert Group of the Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life Indicators

    Margaret Keith, PhD
    Adjunct Assistant Professor
    Department of Sociology and Anthropology
    Board of Directors Toxic Free Canada
    University of Windsor
    Ontario, Canada

    Joseph Mangano, MPH, MBA
    Executive Director
    Radiation and Public Health Project
    New York, New York

    James R. Mellow, MD, MS
    Robert Wood Johnson Family Medicine Fellow
    Physicians for Social Responsibility
    Alliance for a Clean and Healthy Maine
    Portland, Maine

    Vicente Navarro, MD, PhD
    Professor of Health Policy
    The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions
    Baltimore, Maryland

    Peter Orris, MD, MPH, FACP, FACOEM
    Professor and Chief of Service
    Environmental and Occupational Medicine
    University of Illinois at Chicago Medical Center;
    Professor, Internal and Preventive Medicine
    Rush University College of Medicine;
    Professor, Preventive Medicine
    Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
    Chicago, Illinois

    Lawrence A. Plumlee, MD
    President, Chemical Sensitivity Disorders Association
    Bethesda, Maryland

    Horst Rechelbacher
    President, Intelligent Nutrients
    Minneapolis, Minnesota

    Janette D. Sherman, MD
    Adjunct Professor Environmental Institute
    Western Michigan University
    Kalamazoo, Michigan

    Eileen M. Wright, MD, ABIHM
    Great Smokies Medical Center
    Asheville, North Carolina

    Daphne Wysham
    Fellow, Institute for Policy Studies
    Washington, District of Columbia

    Quentin D. Young, MD
    Chairman, Health and Medicine Policy Research Group
    Chicago, Illinois