Childhood Cancer Death Rates For Black And Hispanic Children Stopped Improving After 2011, Study Shows
The survival rate for childhood cancer has improved significantly over the years due to advances in modern-day medicine and early detection, but lifesaving treatment can be hard for Black and Hispanic children to access.
According to a new report published by the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention, childhood cancer death rates for Black and Hispanic children stopped improving after 2011. Between 2001 and 2011 declines in cancer death rates for Black, Hispanic, and white youth were similar, ranging from 15% to 17%. However, only rates for white youth continued to decline through 2021, the report published Nov. 16 noted. According to the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention, in 2021, the rate for white children was 19% to 20% lower than for Black and Hispanic children.
Dr. Sharon Castellino, a pediatric specialist at Emory University told the Associated Press, that expensive and complex cancer treatments may be to blame for the eyebrow-raising gap.
She argued that Black and Brown families need more social workers to help them navigate the cost and time of extended cancer treatment for their children. For example, social workers can help parents file paperwork so that they can secure job protection throughout the process. She also noted that Black and Hispanic parents could use additional help to stay on top of expiration dates and policy plans to ensure that their child’s insurance doesn’t lapse.
Overall, childhood cancer rates for kids and teens between the ages of 0-19 in the United States saw a 24% decrease between 2001 and 2011, dropping from 2.75 to 2.10 per 100,000. Rates for youth between the ages of 0-9 continued to decline through 2021, according to the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention.
The report noted that Brain cancer was the most common cancer-causing death in youth in 2021, with a rate of 0.59, around 23% higher than the rate for leukemia, which was 0.48. That’s more than twice that of bone and articular cartilage cancer which had a rate of 0.25.
Brain cancer in children, like many cancers, can have multifactorial causes. Some genetic conditions can increase the risk of brain cancer in children. According to the American Cancer Society, DNA mutations can turn on cancer-causing genes called oncogenes in the body. These genes can be inherited or develop over time. High-dose radiation to the head as part of previous cancer treatment or radiation therapy can increase the risk of developing brain tumors later in life as well as exposure to certain environmental toxins or chemicals.
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