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Colon cancer deaths can be prevented by early diagnosis through screening and quality care. The screening rate for whites is 50 percent compared to just 40 percent for blacks.
The screening rate for Hispanics is an even-lower 32 percent, but the death rate for Hispanics -- fewer than 13 per 100,000 -- is lower than it is for whites.
That paradox is not unique to colon cancer: Poorly insured Hispanics have fared better than whites and blacks in several measures of cancer and heart disease.
"It's a mystery," said Dr. Daniel Blumenthal, chair of the Morehouse School of Medicine's Department of Community Health and Preventive Medicine.
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American Cancer Society: http://www.cancer.org/
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