Income, race are key factors in cancer fight
9/15/2005 New Jersey Bob Groves NorthJersey.com Income and race appear to make a difference in New Jersey when it comes to surviving cancer, according to the state's first county-by-county tally of the disease. Those factors appear to affect access to health care - particularly early diagnosis - which is key in reducing mortality, state health officials said Wednesday in presenting statistical "snapshots" of all 21 counties in the state. Those profiles were based on 1996-2000 state and federal data. In Bergen County - which is 78 percent white and has a median household income of $65,241 - the incidence for all cancers among men was 633.3 per 100,000, compared with New Jersey's overall rate of 628.7. But the mortality rate for Bergen County men with cancer was 241.2, slightly less than the 261.1 statewide average rate for men. Women in Bergen County had a 456.8 incidence rate, compared with 453.7 for the state, and a 173.2 mortality rate, compared with 181.6 for the state. By comparison, Essex County - which is 45 percent white and has a median household income of $44,944 - had more cases and deaths among men than the state average. Women in the county had a lower incidence than the statewide average, but they had a 188.1 mortality rate, compared with the 181.6 statewide rate for women. Essex also had the highest prostate cancer mortality rate and one of the highest oral cancer death rates. "We have to help people understand the benefits of cancer screening [...]