Best Practices Awareness Outreach Strategies: Background
Information
Over 200 mayors have joined The Mayors' Campaign Against Breast Cancer
to increase awareness and screening in their communities. Kicked off by
The United States Conference of Mayors (USCM) in November 1997, the goal
of the initiative is to save lives through the early detection of breast
cancer.
Support for the Campaign
In keeping with its reliance on public/private partnerships to increase
breast cancer screenings, in October 1997 the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) entered into a five-year cooperative agreement with
the Conference to conduct this initiative. The objective is to encourage
women - - particularly those who are low-income, over fifty years old,
and/or of racial and ethnic minorities - - to seek breast cancer screening.
CDC has provided more than 1.7 million screenings since 1991 through its
National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (NBCCEDP) and
looks to increase this number with the support of the mayors. Currently,
CDC estimates that only twelve to fifteen percent of those who are eligible
are taking advantage of NBCCEDP-supported mammography.
The American Cancer Society (ACS), another supporter of the mayors'
campaign, estimates that 175,000 new cases of breast cancer will be diagnosed
in 1999 and that 43,300 will die from this disease. However, it is known
that early detection and treatment can reduce breast cancer deaths by one-third
in women fifty years and older.
Campaign Activities and Areas of Concentration
Information exchange forms the core of the USCM campaign so that mayors
may take advantage of each other's experiences in promoting breast cancer
awareness. These experiences are being presented through Conference of
Mayors publications such as U. S. Mayor and special editions of Best Practices
for Cities and Information Exchange; related activities at USCM's annual
and winter meetings; and one-on-one contacts with the Conference staff
and cities participating in the campaign.While mayors are free to select
their own local activities, each year The Mayors' Campaign Against Breast
Cancer has - - within the overall goal of encouraging more women to seek
screening - - a specific national focus. Accordingly, campaign mayors -
- who are also USCM members - - are invited to contribute to a Best Practices
publication that presents the annual national focus. The area of concentration
during the first year of the campaign has been on breast cancer awareness
outreach strategies. During the second year, the focus will be upon treatment
plans. The third year will emphasize information exchange about service
delivery, particularly for difficult-to-reach populations. Funding alternatives
will be presented during the fourth year. For the fifth year campaign members
will report on the outcomes of their local initiatives.
Impetus for the Campaign
The mayors' campaign grew out of a successful breast cancer awareness
forum at the 1997 Winter Meeting, supported by CDC and co-chaired by Mayors
Meyera Oberndorf and James Garner. Following this forum, the mayors identified
breast cancer as a priority issue in 1997 and recommended that a session
be held at the 1997 Annual Meeting to plan for a long-term mayors' initiative
against breast cancer. At that session, supported by CDC and ACS, the mayors
called for a national campaign against breast cancer. The Zeneca HealthCare
Foundation has also been a cosponsor of subsequent campaign activities.
How to Join
If you would like to join The Mayors' Campaign Against Breast Cancer,
please contact Richard C. Johnson,
Director of Health Programs for the Conference, at 202/861-6753, or return
the sign-up form that is included in this publication. The campaign is
continuous, so mayors may join at any point during the five-year initiative. |