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National Hispanic
Caucus Of State
Legislators (NHCSL)
Supports A
Resolution To End
Cervical Cancer In
Our Lifetime
WHEREAS, following
breast cancer,
cervical cancer is
the second most
common cancer in
women worldwide; and
WHEREAS, cervical
cancer is the third
most common
gynecological cancer
among American women,
with approximately
10,000 American
women expected to
develop cervical
cancer in 2006 and
an estimated 3,700
deaths (or over 10
American women per
day) due to cervical
cancer, according to
the National Women’s
Health Resource
Center and the
American Cancer
Society; and
WHEREAS, cervical
cancer
disproportionately
affects minority
women and women with
lower incomes
because they are
less likely to have
access to the best
routine screening
programs and most
accurate
technologies or to
have awareness of
the causes and
preventive measures
related to cervical
cancer; and
WHEREAS, cervical
cancer incidence in
Hispanic women is
twice that of
Caucasian women, and
overall incidence
rates of cervical
cancer in Hispanic
women compared to
Caucasian women are
greater than the
difference in breast
cancer incidence
rates when comparing
Hispanic and
Caucasian women; and
WHEREAS, with
regular and accurate
screening, cervical
cancer is highly
preventable due to
widespread screening
programs that have
helped to reduce
death rates of women
from cervical
cancer, though women
continue to be
unaware of and
needlessly die of
cervical cancer,
even with such
advanced medical
techniques and
evaluative
procedures; and
WHEREAS,
approximately half
of all cervical
cancer cases are in
women who have never
been screened, and
10 percent of cases
are in women who
have not been
screened within the
last 5 years; and
WHEREAS, the median
age of cervical
cancer patients at
diagnosis is 47
years, the youngest
median age for all
female reproductive
cancers; and
WHEREAS, a virus
called human
papillomavirus
(HPV), for which
there is no cure,
causes 99.7% of all
cervical cancer
cases, and 1 in 4
young people 15 to
24 years of age are
currently infected
with HPV, and at
least 80% of
sexually active
women in the U.S.
will have acquired a
genital HPV
infection by 50
years of age, and
nearly all sexually
active adults will
be infected with HPV
at some point in
their life since HPV
is spread by
intimate skin to
skin contact with
the genital area,
according to the
Association of
Reproductive Health
Professionals; and
WHEREAS, most HPV
infections have no
symptoms and usually
go away on their
own, but high-risk
HPV types can remain
undetected in the
body for a period of
years and develop
into cervical
cancer; and
WHEREAS, experience
shows that
increasing cervical
cancer awareness
among women,
especially the
underserved women
within our states
and territories,
significantly
reduces the
probability of death
and the billions of
dollars spent
annually to screen
and treat HPV and
cervical cancer; and
WHEREAS, new
screening
technologies,
including
FDA-approved testing
for human
papillomavirus
combined with liquid
Pap tests, and a
newly approved
vaccine to prevent
the most common
types of HPV offer
new opportunities to
finally eliminate
this potentially
deadly disease
through early
identification and
prevention; and
WHEREAS, the U.S.
Center for Disease
Control and
Prevention’s
Advisory Committee
on Immunization
Practices voted
unanimously to
recommend that all
girls and women 11
to 26 years old be
vaccinated with the
currently available
FDA approved vaccine
to prevent cervical
cancer, precancerous
and low grade
lesions, and genital
warts caused by
human
papillomavirus;
WHEREAS, leading
medical
organizations,
including the
American College of
Obstetricians and
Gynecologists, the
American Cancer
Society, the
Association of
Reproductive Health
Professionals, the
American Academy of
Pediatrics support
the widespread
adoption and use of
this life-saving
vaccine to prevent
the most common
types of human
papillomavirus; and
WHEREAS, disease
reduction and
elimination are
based on preventing
disease through
vaccination prior to
exposure to a given
disease; and
WHEREAS, all women
are entitled to
proper cervical
cancer information
and the most
effective preventive
technologies, so
that they can be
empowered to make
informed healthcare
decisions and have
the broadest access
possible to
preventive cervical
cancer technologies;
and
WHEREAS, the State
and Territorial
Legislatures
recognize that only
through education,
screening, and the
broadest vaccination
possible can ethnic
disparities in
healthcare truly be
eliminated for the
benefit of girls and
women from all walks
of life; now
therefore,
BE IT RESOLVED, that
the National
Hispanic Caucus of
State Legislators
supports the
development by all
states and U.S.
territories of
legislation to
require that all
young women, prior
to entry into middle
school, be educated
regarding HPV and
vaccinated against
cervical cancer and
the most common
types of HPV that
can lead to cervical
cancer;
BE IT FURTHER
RESOLVED, that NHCSL
supports legislation
requiring state
policy-making
bodies, such as
departments of
health and state CMS
programs, to ensure
broad access to
newly emerging
preventive
technologies, such
as the HPV/cervical
cancer vaccine, for
low-income and
Medicaid-eligible
young adult women,
in order to
significantly reduce
the heavy burden of
treatment and
screening costs to
state entitlement
program budgets; and
BE IT FURTHER
RESOLVED, that NHCSL
is firmly committed
to the notion that
not one more
Hispanic woman or
woman of color
should ever have to
be traumatized by
cervical cancer.
This resolution was
adopted this
November 18, 2006,
at the National
Hispanic Caucus of
State Legislators
Executive Committee
& BBA Annual Meeting
held in San Juan,
Puerto Rico.
Assemblyman Felix W.
Ortiz, NY
NHCSL President |