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  • I would love for endometrial cancer to become something that

  • all women are aware of. They're aware of the symptoms.

  • They're aware that when we diagnose it early, it is almost always curable.

  • And that we're here to help.

  • The truth

  • is that that's actually the most common GI in cancer in the United States.

  • So it's four times more common than cervical cancer.

  • It's twice as common as ovarian cancer and as a due in on colleges.

  • That's what we see women with endometrial cancer every day.

  • And often we'll hear that women had never heard of it before they were diagnosed.

  • One of the cardinal signs of endometrial cancer is

  • vaginal bleeding that happens after menopause.

  • But also, it's really important to know that we're seeing more

  • and more endometrial cancer among younger women.

  • The really important thing to know about that symptom is that it doesn't

  • have to be a lot of bleeding.

  • It doesn't have to be something heavy or even painful.

  • A few drops of blood is enough to to prompt

  • an evaluation or to mean that you should be evaluated.

  • So I want women to know that a diagnosis of endometrial cancer is not a fatal life

  • sentence, that many, many women are diagnosed early

  • and with a combination of surgery and sometimes chemotherapy and radiation

  • over 80% of women diagnosed with endometrial cancer will survive.

  • I co-founded an organization called Icona, which is the Endometrial Cancer Action

  • Network for African-Americans

  • And part of the reason was that actually within endometrial cancer,

  • black women have a 90% higher mortality

  • rate than all other groups of women in the United States.

  • This is actually a larger difference in terms of a racial disparity

  • than we see in breast cancer and colon cancer.

  • Reason for this

  • really markedly high mortality among black women comes from a lot of things.

  • So part of it

  • definitely is the fact that simply people don't know about this condition.

  • Another reason is that the quality of our health care

  • system really isn't the same for black women than it is for everybody

  • else, especially when it comes to their reproductive health care.

  • So we've got a lot of work to do in the field in the world of bias.

  • And quality of care.

  • We don't know why, but black women do have a higher

  • likelihood of having more aggressive kinds of endometrial cancer.

  • In fact, that's the reason why black women should have the most awareness

  • and be ready to go in terms of symptoms and getting evaluated.

  • And we're working now on research to try to understand where that risk of the more

  • aggressive types come from, whether it's something environmental experience.

  • We're trying to figure that out.

  • What I want everybody to know is that these disparities

  • in endometrial cancer don't exist in a vacuum.

  • They exist among they exist in a whole spectrum of quality

  • of care of black women.

  • And once we decide as a medical profession and as a community, of black women

  • that we will not accept the lower quality care, that we will do whatever

  • it takes to make sure that our community of black women in this country

  • from all shapes and sizes survives and thrives in their reproductive health.

  • We will get there and we'll meet that goal

I would love for endometrial cancer to become something that

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