And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

Date:   Mon, 22 Mar 1999 03:59:29 -1000
From: Richard N Salvador <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Subject: STUDY CALLS MARSHALL ISLANDS' CANCER RATE EXTREME

fyi:
the author, Giff Johnson, was the husband of the late Darlene 
Keju-Johnson, a Marshall Islander woman activist who died of
radiation-induced cancer.


[http://pidp.ewc.hawaii.edu/PIReport/1999/March/03-22-07.html]

PACIFIC ISLANDS REPORT
Monday, March 22, 1999

Pacific Islands Development Program/East-West Center
Center for Pacific Islands Studies/University of Hawaii at Manoa


STUDY CALLS MARSHALL ISLANDS' CANCER RATE EXTREME

By Giff Johnson

MAJURO, Marshall Islands (March 19, 1999 - Marshall Islands Journal)--
Cancer rates in the Marshall Islands -- caused by a combination of
exposure to nuclear test fallout and malnutrition and other factors
associated with rapid westernization -- are "alarming," said a study
published in a recent edition of Cancer, the journal of the American
Cancer Society.

"The cancer incidence in the Marshall Islands is extreme," said the 
study written by Dr. Neal Palafox of the University of Hawaii, John A.
Burns Medical School, and four other doctors, including Dr. Kennar Briand,
the Director of Public Health in Majuro.

Additional study of the causes and actual incidence of cancers in the
Marshall Islands would be a major aid to prevention and control of cancer
in the future, the doctors said.

The study compared the rate of a variety of cancers in the Marshall
Islands to the rate in the U.S. "Cancer incidence rates were higher in
virtually every category in the Marshall Islands compared with the United
States for the period 1985-1994," the study said. It pointed out that the
Marshall Islands lung cancer rates were 3.8 times higher in males and 3.09
times higher in females, cervical cancer rates were 5.8 times higher, and
liver cancer rates were 15.3 times higher in males and 40
times higher in females compared with U.S. rates.

Despite the significantly elevated levels of cancer in the Marshalls, the 
researchers believe that the level is actually underestimated because of
"an underdeveloped health record-keeping system."

The study was based on records at the Nuclear Claims Tribunal of 470
people who had died of cancer. The Tribunal is a U.S.-funded agency that
provides compensation to islanders for health problems associated with
exposure to nuclear test fallout from the 67 American tests at Bikini and
Enewetak. "The data presented here represents a very conservative
estimation of the true cancer incidence in the Marshall Islands," the
study said. "The finding of substantially higher cancer incidence rates 
in the Marshall Islands compared with the U.S. in virtually all categories
studied, in view of the aforementioned under-ascertainment of cases, is
alarming."

The study said that the difference in cancer rates between the Marshall 
Islands and the U.S. "can be explained by environmental and life-style
factors."

Referring to the 67 nuclear tests, the study said that "increases in 
leukemia, breast cancer and thyroid cancer after radiation exposure have
been well established, especially in childhood exposures."

Another risk factor for cancer is the high rate of malnutrition in the 
Marshall Islands, most notably vitamin A deficiency. A 1994 study of
children in the one-to-five year age group showed that 62 percent had
severe vitamin A deficiency by World Health Organization standards, the
study said, adding that vitamin A deficiency has been "highly associated"
with head and neck cancers, and has also been linked to lung, liver,
cervical and bladder cancers.

"Westernization of the Marshall Islands brought social problems associated 
with urbanization and breakdown of indigenous cultural values," it said.
"There are high rates of alcohol abuse, smoking and sexually transmitted
diseases.

"In addition, the rates of hepatitis B are alarming, as they are 
throughout the Pacific. These factors may account for some of the high
incidence rates of the cancers identified. For example, alcohol abuse and
hepatitis B may account for some of the higher rates of liver cancer,
sexually transmitted diseases are known to be associated with cervical
cancer, and the high rate of smoking would naturally increase the 
incidence of lung cancer."

The study concluded that more complete analysis and study of cancer in the
Marshall Islands is necessary to improve prevention and control.

MARSHALL ISLANDS JOURNAL
Box 14, Majuro, Marshall Islands 96960
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Fax: 692-625-3136
Tel. 692-625-8143
Subscriptions (weekly): 1 year: US $87.00; 
International $227.00 (air mail)

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