Colon cancer screening is especially beneficial, because benign lesions can be found and removed, preventing cancer from having a chance to develop.
You might think that close relatives of colon cancer patients would want to be screened. But take the case of the family of Cordell Harper, a 67-year-old African-American man. Fourteen years ago he was diagnosed with colon cancer. He underwent surgery and chemotherapy.
Harper has three brothers. They all refuse to get colonoscopies.
“So, if having a brother get colon cancer doesn’t make you want to get a colonoscopy, what will?” he asks, with a laugh. "Having issues, you know, and it may be too late then.”
Harper’s brothers are all over 50. That’s the age many national organizations recommend people begin colon cancer screening. But those with a family history should start sooner. Part of the reason Harper’s brothers won’t get screened has to do with the stigma of having a colonoscopy, which involves threading a flexible tube, called a colonoscope, through the rectum and into the colon. Dr. Fola May says that’s a common concern.
“Men in our focus group study and men in other studies have said, ‘I do not want any sort of procedure where I have to have any sort of instrument that’s placed into my behind,' " May said. "That was a persistent theme throughout our ... studies.”
That was the case with Michael Stennis, who died of colon cancer in 2003. I met his wife, Erin Stennis, at a “Relay for Life” cancer event in Los Angeles this summer. After he found blood in his stool, a gastroenterologist told him to get a colonoscopy.
“When he found out what a colonoscopy was, he said no one was going to do that to him," Erin Stennis told me. "So he literally sucked up the pain for about six years, and it got to the point where I found him one day hunched over in a closet in our home.”
Her husband was soon diagnosed with stage four colon cancer. He lived just two more years. During that time, the couple talked to everyone they could, going to churches and other groups, to try to raise awareness of colon cancer among African Americans.
“I think it’s a message that we need to get out, especially to the African-American community," Erin Stennis said, "that by going and having a colonoscopy, you lessen the chances of being diagnosed with this. It’s getting over the stigma attached to colonoscopy and what the procedure entails."
But the low screening rates are due to more than stigma. In another study, Spiegel and his colleagues, found that part of the responsibility may rest with doctors.
“We found that African-Americans were more likely to say that their doctor never recommended a colonoscopy or any kind of colon cancer screening than any other racial and ethnic groups,” Dr. Spiegel said.
Dr. Spiegel says that’s a big failure at the provider level. A nudge from the doctor could make a big difference.
“We found that when doctors do recommend screening, it increases the chances of getting screened by nearly twofold,” Dr. Spiegel said.
Dr. Spiegel’s team is planning a follow-up study to see if the Affordable Care Act, which fully covers preventive tests like colonoscopies, will make any dent in the racial disparity of colon cancer outcomes.
Avishay Artsy reported this story as a 2015 California Health Journalism Fellow at the USC Annenberg School of Journalism.