Advocacy


Report Card on Lung Cancer

Georgia

Lung Cancer Alliance-Georgia's Commitment to Improving Failing Grades

Subject Grade Comments
Number of Deaths F Unacceptable. Lung cancer is the number one cause of cancer death among Georgian men and women. This year alone, 6,260 Georgians will be diagnosed-4,970 will die from the disease. That is 30% of all cancer deaths in the state. It kills one and a half times more Georgian women than breast cancer, almost three times more Georgian men than prostate cancer. In fact, lung cancer rates are 21% higher among Georgian men than among US men overall.
Five-Year-Survival-Rate F No progress. Lung cancer is the only major cancer with virtually no improvement in survival for nearly 40 years. Its 5-year survival rate has hovered at 15%, with most succumbing to the disease within the first year of diagnosis. Conversely, breast cancer's 5-year survival rate now stands at over 88% and prostate cancer is over 99%.
Number of Late-Stage Diagnoses F Must improve. Lung cancer is woefully underfunded and under-researched, relative to its Georgia public health impact. Georgia's share of the Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) is just under $5 billion over 25 years. Thus far, almost none of the MSA funds have been provided to lung cancer research and early detection.
Newly-Addicted Youth Smokers F Shameful. 15,600 new Georgian "daily" smokers under age 18 get addicted each year. 17.8 million packs of cigarettes are bought or smoked by youth in Georgia each year. 21% of high school students smoke cigarettes.
State-Supported Early Detection Program F Dismal. Over 70% of lung cancer diagnoses are late stage when it is not curable. Neither the State of Georgia, nor the federal government, supports or funds the early detection of lung cancer.
State Cancer Plan Commitment F Promising but needs improvement. The State Cancer Plan currently lacks commitment to lung cancer. This omission must be corrected.

*MSA - Master Settlement Agreement. Agreement between state attorneys general and major tobacco product manufacturers to reimburse states for the cost of treating smoking-related illnesses, totaling $206 billion to be paid to states over 25 years starting in 1998.



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