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· Lung Cancer
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Lung cancer has stricken Randy Zisook and Jessica Neal, but they're fighting back Jump to full article: Chicago Tribune, 2009-11-18 Author: Amanda Marrazzo Special to the Tribune
Intro: Lung cancer has forced Neal and Zisook into a kind of club that no one wants to be a member of. They have become unlikely friends, engaged in a campaign of awareness and compassion in their roles as representatives for the American Lung Association in greater Chicago for November, which is Lung Cancer Awareness Month.
Their messages have a common purpose, if originating from opposite circumstances. Neal wants people to realize that lung cancer is not just a smoker's disease. Zisook suggests parents hammer home the dangers of smoking by asking children to take five family members and five best friends and then decide which five will die.
"You have to put that right in people's faces, and that is horrible, but it is the truth," he said. "Sure, I always knew smoking is bad, but no one ever told me that 50 percent of people who smoke will die from it." . . .
"What we are finding is that because of that stigma, lung cancer is not financially supported in the same way as other cancers," said Harold Wimmer, chief executive officer for the American Lung Association of Illinois of Greater Chicago. "The fact is that lung cancer is the No. 1 cause of cancer-related deaths, but 40 percent of individuals who have lung cancer are nonsmokers."
The disparity in per-patient spending on research each year is striking: For lung cancer it's $1,826 per death, compared with $27,038 for breast cancer, according to 2009 statistics from the National Institutes of Health.
Another disparity: 160,000 people this year will die of lung cancer compared with 25,000 of breast cancer, Wimmer said.
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Neal and Zisook are doing their part to raise awareness. And although Neal said "smoking is disgusting" she does not think people should die for taking up a bad habit.
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