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For Immediate Release
05.22.2006

Contact: Jamie Bearse
202-303-3105

First-Ever Prostate Cancer Report Cards Released

Five States Fail, Connecticut Heads the Class

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Five states failed the first-ever prostate cancer state-by-state report card issued by the National Prostate Cancer Coalition (NPCC) in time for June (Do it for Dad! Men’s Health Awareness Month).

“Many states are not doing even the simplest things when it comes to fighting prostate cancer,” NPCC CEO Richard N. Atkins, M.D. said. “Early detection saves lives and far too many states don’t encourage men to know the risks and to get tested.”

The report cards are a result of a study by NPCC where each state is graded based on current prostate cancer screening rates, mortality rates and if each state currently has laws in place guaranteeing insurance coverage for testing. Screening and mortality rates are calculated from raw data made available by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

Alabama, Arkansas, Idaho, Mississippi and Wisconsin didn’t make the grade while California, Connecticut (earning a perfect score of 100), Kansas and New York earned A’s.

Each state that failed does not have laws in place forcing insurance companies to cover prostate exams. Only 28 states have insurance mandates compared to 49 states that require insurance agencies to cover breast cancer screenings a disease with a nearly identical caseload. Utah, which was given a “D-”, is the only state in the union not to offer insurance for both prostate and breast cancer screenings.

Two of the failing states, Mississippi and Alabama rank second and fourth respectively in having the highest prostate cancer death rates. Meanwhile, Idaho and Wisconsin rank fifth and ninth respectively in the lowest screening rates.

Connecticut is the only state to rank in the top 10 in highest screening rates and lowest death rates while the other three states earned B’s in other categories. Three other states, Delaware, New Jersey and Rhode Island, received grades of an “A-”.

Florida would have received a perfect score if it weren’t for the absence of a screening mandate.

“There are several states that could’ve scored A’s if only they had screening mandates,” said Atkins. “Screening rates are already starting to improve among the states that have recently adopted screening mandates like Oregon and Washington.”

Atkins added that Michigan would have gotten an ‘A’ while Iowa, Massachusetts, Montana and Nebraska would have received ‘B’s”.

COMPLETE LIST

  Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
DC
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
  F
C+
C-
F
A
B
A
A-
C
B
B
D
F
C
C
C-
A
D
C+
C+
C+
C-
C+
C-
F
B
C-
C
D
C-
A-
D
A
B
C-
D
B+
C
D
A-
C
B
C+
B
D-
D
C+
C+
C
F
C+

* States in bold are ones without an insurance screening mandate.

About the National Prostate Cancer Coalition
Celebrating 10 years of saving lives, the National Prostate Cancer Coalition sets the standard for rapidly reducing the burden of prostate cancer on American men and their families through awareness, outreach and advocacy.

 

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