Why colon cancer screening kits are offered free ?”
It’s the cancer with the yuck factor, that part of the anatomy lots of people would rather ignore. And too many are ignoring it possibly to death: Nearly 42 million Americans over 50 aren’t getting checks for colorectal cancer, the nation’s No. 2 cancer killer. Now in five states, a government-funded project is beginning to offer free testing for the poor, part of a new push to better fight one of the few cancers that can be prevented, not just treated, if screening uncovers the earliest signs of trouble. Money isn’t the only barrier. This is a cancer that can silently lurk in anyone, particularly during middle age and beyond. Black Americans are especially at risk. Yet colorectal cancer doesn’t get the attention of breast and prostate cancers that claim fewer lives.
Free colon cancer screening kits offered By KSNW News KSNW-TV updated 2:17 p.m. ET March 7, 2009 WICHITA, Kansas – March is Colon Cancer Awareness Month and the Cancer Society is making it easy for many of us to get tested by offering free test kits at many area Walgreens. The American Cancer Society is teaming up with Via Christi to offer the kits. The idea is to raise awareness to the cancer and provide testing for the under insured in Wichita. If detected early enough, colon cancer can be successfully treated. The kits are easy to use and done in the privacy of your own home. They are free to people 50 and older and are available at five area Walgreens locations in Wichita along with the Hunter Health Clinic and the Colvin Neighborhood City Hall. The Walgreens offering the kits are located at Central and Hillside, Central and West St., 13th and Waco, Harry and Edgemoor and Harry and Broadway.
and, it’s colon cancer awareness month http://www.nccrt.org/News/NewsDetail.aspx?article_id=442 Some States Offer Free Colon Cancer Screening Date: 7/26/2006 Source: Lauran Neergaard / Associated Press Now in five states, a government-funded project is beginning to offer free testing for the poor, part of a new push to better fight one of the few cancers that can be prevented, not just treated, if screening uncovers the earliest signs of trouble. Enter the CDC’s new free-screening project, the first major federal effort to target that population — and one that, if it works, might be expanded nationwide. Participants in Suffolk County, N.Y., and Baltimore will receive colonoscopies, in which doctors use a long flexible tube to visually inspect the colon. In St. Louis; Seattle/King County, Wash.; and statewide in Nebraska most participants will receive at-home fecal tests to detect hidden blood in the