""
SYNTHESIS- Logo
A publication  of the UC Davis Cancer Center
""
Horizontal boundary
""
""
"" ""
  N E W S
"" ""
""
"" ""
""
"" ""
""
"" ""
"" Benefactors
"" ""
"" Calendar of Events
"" ""
"" News
""
"" ""
"" First cancer research endowment established
"" Toward a test for ovarian cancer
"" New drug extends lung cancer survival 22 percent
  Portal to health
  Nigerian-born veterinarian wins award to support cancer research
  Novel compound targets leukemia and lymphoma cells
  Snacks and kids' health
"" ""
"" Planned Rocklin facility to offer outpatient cancer treatment
"" ""
"" Cancer help in Vietnamese
"" ""
"" Do women who take tamoxifen to
prevent breast cancer live longer?
"" ""
"" $3.3 million for basic science research in cancer
"" ""
"" Joyce Raley Teel Award
"" ""
"" Honoring survivors
"" ""
"" Otto honored
"" ""
  Contact
"" ""
  Subscribe
"" ""
  Past issues
Vertical Seperator Line
 
Current Issue: VOLUME 8. NO 2. SPRING/SUMMER 2006
""
""
NEWS
"" ""
""
"" ""
"" ""
 
""

Cancer help in Vietnamese

Cervical cancer is five times as common among Vietnamese American women as among white women, and Vietnamese American men have the country's highest liver cancer rate. Vietnamese Americans are also less likely than whites to get regular Pap tests, mammograms and other cancer screening tests.

A new Vietnamese-language, cancer-information and referral line, the first of its kind in the region, is helping to address such disparities. The number is (916) 449-5544. Vietnamese-speaking counselors, trained by the National Cancer Institute's Cancer Information Service, field the calls. The line was established by AANCART (for Asian American Network for Cancer Awareness Research and Treatment), an NCI-funded project headquartered at UC Davis Cancer Center.

Among major metropolitan areas nationwide, the Sacramento region has the 11th largest Vietnamese population. More than 18,000 Vietnamese live in Sacramento and Yolo counties.

"We are proud to be able to offer this service, which will help to arm Vietnamese Americans with the information they need to reduce their unequal and unnecessary cancer burden," said Moon S. Chen, Jr., associate director for cancer disparities and research at UC Davis Cancer Center and principal investigator of AANCART.

""
"" ""
 
"" ""
"" ""
Vertical Seperator Line
"" "" ""
     
"" "" Vertical Seperator Line "" "" "" ""
"" "" Vertical Seperator Line
""
""

UC DAVIS CANCER CENTER
4501 X Street
Sacramento, CA 95817

cancer.center@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu

© 2006 UC Regents. All rights reserved.

"" "" ""