Orange County NC Website
1 <br /> ORANGE COUNTY <br /> BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS <br /> Action Agenda <br /> Item No. V.izr-E <br /> ACTION AGENDA ITEM ABSTRACT <br /> Meeting Date: January 19, 1993 <br /> SUBJECT: Expansion of State Contract for the Comprehensive Breast <br /> and Cervical Cancer Control Program <br /> DEPARTMENT: HEALTH PUBLIC HEARING: Yes X No <br /> ATTACHMENT(S) : INFORMATION CONTACT: <br /> HEALTH DIRECTOR'S OFFICE X2411 <br /> 1. Notice of Award <br /> 2. Service Description and 1992-93 <br /> Major Objectives TELEPHONE NUMBER: <br /> 3. Contract Amendment Page Hillsborough -732-8181 <br /> 4. Local Health Department Chapel Hill -968-4501 <br /> Budget Page Mebane -227-2031 <br /> Durham -688-7331 <br /> PURPOSE: <br /> To accept funding from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) as an addition to <br /> the State Contract to provide the screening and follow-up services for women who <br /> qualify for the Comprehensive Breast and Cervical Cancer Control Program. <br /> BACKGROUND: <br /> The Orange County Health Department Community Diagnosis for 1992-93 identified <br /> cancer as one of the top leading causes of death in Orange County and the <br /> disparity in health indicators between European-American and African-American <br /> population groups in orange County among the highest priority problems. <br /> CERVICAL CANCER: Between 1980 and 1987, 1400 women in North Carolina died of <br /> preventable cervical cancer. The age-adjusted mortality rates for the white <br /> population are 3.5/100,000 and 10.6/100,000 for the black population. The <br /> • mortality percentage for women age 35 and older has increased from 91% in 1985 to <br /> 94% in 1989. <br /> BREAST CANCER: In 1989, 1,099 women died of breast cancer in North Carolina <br /> making it the leading cause of cancer deaths in women in the state. North <br /> Carolina's mortality rate of 26.4/100,000 ranks 23rd in the United States. In <br /> race adjusted mortality rates, white women are 25.6/100,000 and black women are <br /> 30.7/100,000. For both races, mortality rates are much higher among older <br /> women. In 1986-87, for example the mortality for women less than 50 years <br /> was 6.4 while that for 50 and older was 51.4/100,000. <br />