Who needs Mammograms?
Post Written by CHC Member Melissa Rothman
Melissa serves as a Health Educator with Erie Family Health Center - West Town
Recently, celebrity Angelina Jolie announced her preventative double mastectomy in the New York Times. As a carrier of the BRCA1 gene, Jolie reportedly reduced her 87% risk of breast cancer to 5% through this surgery, and her mastectomy announcement draws necessary attention to breast cancer prevention. However, it is important for women to understand that only a small fraction of breast cancers are caused by genes. Increasing the number of women that receive mammograms could lead to many more cured cases of breast cancer.
According to the Chicago Breast Cancer Task Force,'75% of women that die from breast cancer have not received regular mammograms." Unfortunately, funding to the Illinois Breast and Cervical Cancer Program (IBCCP), which provides mammograms to uninsured women, may be cut by $3 million dollars in this next fiscal year. Currently, only about 1 in every 8 -10 uninsured women are covered by the program. These cuts will leave even more women without coverage, and disproportionately affect communities of color.
To find out if you may need to get tested for the BRCA gene mutations, click here.
If you are age 35 or older, you should be getting regular mammograms. For a list of organizations that give free and reduced cost mammograms, click here.