Throughout the month of June we've been sharing information about survivorship and what it means to those who are given the title "Survivor" after hearing the words "You have cancer." The journey of cancer is different for everyone. Some consider the journey to be a kind of battle - a war they will either win or lose. Others look at it as just one bump in the road that they will get over and put behind them. For others it is (or becomes) a spiritual journey that causes them to look at their life differently and perhaps rearrange some of the priorities they had pre-diagnosis. And for some, it's a combination of some or all of these, or something completely their own.
No matter what the journey is to each individual, it's safe to say that the desire to become a "survivor" is universal. And for those of us who have been caregivers or who have just been around as a friend or loved-one dealt with cancer treatments, we want to do everything we can to make their journey shorter, easier, and more likely to end with the rest of a long life ahead of them. What if we told you that you have the opportunity to help potentially millions of people not only become survivors, but never be diagnosed at all? It's true... read on.
The American Cancer Society's Epidemiology Research Program is inviting men and women between the ages of 30 and 65 years of age who have no personal history of cancer to join an historic research study. The ultimate goal is to enroll at least 300,000 adults from various racial/ethnic backgrounds from across the U.S. By joining Cancer Prevention Study - 3 (CPS-3), you can help researchers understand how to prevent cancer.
The first version of this study, CPS-1, was the largest prospective mortality study of diseases caused by tobacco use ever conducted. The study, which began in 1959 and continued through September 1972, played a critical role in establishing the causal linkage between smoking and several diseases, and it remains one of the most comprehensive presentations of the disease risks caused by smoking. The laws and regulations currently in place related to advertising and sales of tobacco products are a direct result of CPS-1.
CPS-2 began in 1982 as a prospective mortality study of approximately 1.2 million American men and women. Approximately 77,000 volunteers for the American Cancer Society recruited participants into the study in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. This study is still ongoing.
All voluntary participants in CPS-3 will be required to undergo a simple blood draw, and to complete a detailed questionnaire that will be used as a base-line for your current health and lifestyle. The purpose of CPS-3 is to better understand ways to prevent cancer. This multi-year survey will study lifestyle, behavioral, environmental and genetic factors that may cause or prevent cancer with the ultimate goal of eliminating cancer as a major health problem for this and future generations.
A local enrollment opportunity is coming up July 19 and 20 in Fort Smith. You can find more information on enrollment on the event website. Feel free to share the site and recruit your friends and family. Together, we can make an impact on the future of cancer in our world.
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