Ask Clinton about funding lung cancer research
11 Apr 2008 by Wendi Lewis under Events, News, Organizations, PeopleMeso victims, unite! The Lung Cancer Alliance recently sent an Open Letter to presidential candidate Hillary Clinton following remarks she made pledging funding for breast cancer, asking her to also prioritize funding for lung cancer.
Following is the text of the open letter, along with information about how to contact Clinton’s office. The LCA is urging everyone affected by lung cancer, including mesothelioma, to join their voices in this effort to finally secure the funding that lung cancer has long deserved. It is time to make this a national priority!
An Open Letter to Presidential Candidate Hillary Clinton
April 9, 2008
Yesterday you announced what you would do for breast cancer should you be elected president. When will you announce what you would do for lung cancer?
The $300 million plan you unveiled yesterday to find a cure for breast cancer should be at least doubled for lung cancer since it is killing nearly twice as many women each year as breast cancer. Most women do not even know this.
You do, Senator Clinton, and you specifically cited that fact as part of the justification for Senate Resolution 87, which you co-sponsored and supported and which was passed August 2, 2007. The resolution was a strongly worded policy statement by the Senate calling on the President to declare lung cancer a public health priority and to implement a comprehensive interagency program to reduce lung cancer mortality by 50% by 2015.
The Resolution contains a page and a half of the grim statistics justifying the demand for priority action and specifically notes the enormous under funding of lung cancer research, which receives only seven cents for every federal dollar spent on breast cancer.
Of course we would like to see a cure for breast cancer as we would for all cancers. Thanks to the billions in federal dollars alone that have been invested in breast cancer research and early detection, the 5-year survival rate for breast cancer is now 88%.
Having been massively under-funded, as the resolution notes, lung cancer’s 5-year survival rate is still only 15%. That will no longer be tolerated.
We are not asking for a cure at this point. Just a 50% reduction in the mortality rate for lung cancer, the most lethal cancer, which is now killing more men and women each year than breast, prostate, colon, kidney, melanoma and liver cancers combined.
One in five women being diagnosed with lung cancer now have never smoked at all and they seem to be getting diagnosed younger. Why aren’t women demanding more research? Because they do not know the facts.
You spell out the facts so eloquently in S. Res. 87 and you lay out in the resolution a comprehensive program for lung cancer that is actually quite similar to the one you proposed yesterday for breast cancer.
When will you announce your comprehensive plan for lung cancer? We thank you and look forward to hearing from you on behalf of all those with and at risk for lung cancer, their families, caregivers and friends.
Lung Cancer Alliance
To contact Clinton’s office:
Hillary Clinton General Campaign Headquarters
4420 North Fairfax Drive
Arlington, VA 22203
Ph: 703.469.2008
Fax: 703.962.8600
Comments to “Ask Clinton about funding lung cancer research”
I was at Capital Hill the day that Sen. Hillary Clinton & Sen. Chuck Hagel met with the group from LCA. I remember her telling us that together they were putting forth a Senate proposal. I was more impressed by Sen. Hagel than Hillary but, that was just my opinion. I now think I was right, I think she has forgotten her words to us and needs to be reminded. I don’t want anyone to die from this beast! But give us funding! Yes, people die from breast cancer, I have 2 cousins with it. But I didn’t ask for this disease anymore than they did. But, I want the survival percentage for all of us that they have and we can’t get it unless funding is made available in amounts that will make a real difference!
Hugs to all,
Pam
Pam,
I applaud you for your efforts. Tragically, the majority of the people I speak with about mesothelioma have never heard of it; let alone what causes this terrible disease.
We have to keep up the pressure on politicians to hold true to their word and back critical funding for mesothelioma.
Hopefully through the dedication of people such as you we can help draw more awareness to this disease.
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