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Spotlight
on the Asian American Network for Cancer Awareness Research and
Training
The
Asian American Network for Cancer Awareness Research and Training
(AANCART) is the first national cancer awareness project targeting
the specific needs of Asian Americans, and has been funded for
5 years by the National Cancer Institute's Special Populations
Network Program. Its Principal Investigator, Dr. Moon S. Chen,
Jr. of Ohio State University, assembled a team of university-based
investigators as regional principal investigators in four cities:
Boston, Seattle, San Francisco, and New York.
One of the primary goals of the national AANCART program is to
increase cancer awareness. Although rates of many malignancies
are lower in Asian countries than in the United States, some rates
have been found to greatly increase among Asian Americans within
ten to fifteen years after immigration. Asian Americans also have
lower cancer survival rates than members of some other ethnic
groups. AANCART's educational activities, which encourage early
detection and provide potential avenues for prevention, may ultimately
reduce cancer among Asian Americans.
Dr. Ruby Senie of the Mailman School of Public Health is the Regional
Principal Investigator for New York AANCART. She and her colleagues
have established collaborative outreach activities with Korean
and South Asian community-based organizations in Manhattan and
Queens, the two New York City boroughs with the largest populations
of Koreans and South Asians. One current educational project,
addressing the harmful effects of smoking, was designed by the
Korean Teen Peer Education Group and entitled, "Tobacco Not Tolerated
for Korean American High School Teens." Leadership was provided
by Simona Kwon, a doctoral student at the Mailman School of Public
Health, and also by the Korean Community Services Group of Metropolitan
New York.
Another community-based project, entitled "Needs Assessment among
South Asians," has been created by Ms. Nadia Islam, a doctoral
student, and Dr. Navneet Kathuria, an adjunct member of the Mailman
School of Public Health. Its goal is to assess awareness of cancer
risks, and willingness to participate in early detection programs.
It also assesses community access to quality cancer care. In addition
to these specific projects, partnerships with Korean and Southeast
Asian community organizations have led to several education campaigns
about Hepatitis B, through distribution of literature and brochures
at several cultural events.
Dr.
Marcus Loo, of Weill Cornell Medical Center, is clinical director
of New York AANCART. His efforts focus on stimulating greater
involvement of health professionals in cancer awareness, education,
and research for and among their Asian American patients. Dr.
Loo and his colleague, Dr Ben Choi, have recently received pilot
funding for their project entitled: "Improving Cancer Screening
Compliance in Chinatown through an Educational Partnership with
Community Physicians and Managed Healthcare Plans".
Pilot project applications to stimulate and mentor junior investigators
are among the goals of the AANCART Research Program. One proposal,
entitled "BRCA 1 and 2 and other genetic factors among Asian American
breast cancer cases in New York City" was recently submitted to
the NCI for potential funding by Suh-Hang Hank Juo, M.D., Ph.D.,
of the Columbia Genome Center, and Habib Ahsan, M.D., M.P.H. of
the Mailman School of Public Health. In addition, Simona Kwon
is developing her doctoral thesis entitled: "Understanding the
Role of Social Support in Breast Cancer Detection and Treatment
Decisions among Korean American Women".
During
the next four years the New York AANCART cancer awareness, research
and training program will work hard to expand knowledge of cancer
risks among Asian Americans living in the New York area; to involve
members of the community in research; and to enlist clinicians
in cancer prevention programs designed for Asian Americans who
seek medical care through NewYork Presbyterian Hospital.
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