November 4, 2024
The newly renamed Ralph Lauren Center for Cancer Prevention is now open in Southeast Washington, D.C., and its mission is to assist residents in underserved communities who are at the most risk for long-term health problems.

The newly renamed Ralph Lauren Center for Cancer Prevention is now open in Southeast Washington, D.C., and its mission is to assist residents in underserved communities who are at the most risk for long-term health problems.

Deputy Mayor for D.C. Health and Human Services Wayne Turnage said the disparities in access to healthcare, for cancer as well as other chronic diseases, are extreme in different parts of the city.

A NEW OBAMACARE FIGHT

“We know from years of research that these residents, compared to their peers, in the balance of the city, have much shorter lifespans, fifteen years on average, caused in part by higher morbidity levels, including a higher incidence of various cancers,” Turnage said at the opening ceremony.

“The residents in Ward 8, and to a lesser degree Ward 7, have, for years, suffered from the lack of a quality healthcare facility,” he added.

According to DC.gov, as of 2018, both the incidence rate, or the number of new cancers of a specific type that occur within a population, as well as the mortality rate for all types of cancers, were the highest in Ward 8.

Mayor Muriel Bowser’s administration launched the multi-million dollar District of Columbia Cancer Control Plan in 2022. While the plan acknowledges that cancer mortality and incidence rates have gone down in the district since 2008, it asserts there is more work to be done.

“While we celebrate that progress, we recognize those improvements have not been shared among all DC residents. Our most vulnerable populations remain at higher risk of developing and dying from cancer,” Interim Director of D.C. Health Sharon Lewis wrote in a letter accompanying the plan.

Representatives for the cancer prevention center stressed that they are building a healthier community by encouraging people to engage with healthcare professionals before they get sick and by promoting early intervention, even for those that are uninsured or struggle with healthcare costs.

Turnage said that 90% of people in Ward 8 are on Medicaid, a joint federal and state program that helps cover medical costs for some people with limited income and resources.

“We need to start taking care of people who are well to keep them well, as opposed to a sick care model.” Dr. Lucile Adams-Campbell, founding director of the Ralph Lauren Center for Cancer Prevention, said.

Adams-Campbell mentioned smoking cessation programs, obesity intervention with nutritionists, and participation in clinical research trials as methods to integrate underserved residents into the healthcare system before they get a cancer diagnosis.

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“We are taking meaningful steps to dismantle systemic barriers,” she said.

The center was previously known as the Capital Breast Care Center and has been treating breast cancer patients for years. However, given the new partnership with the Ralph Lauren Corporate Foundation, the facility is now offering services for lung, prostate, colorectal, and other cancers as well.

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