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Devastated by the toll of Cancer, Chicago Teen’s Research Earns Honors

 
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Jazmin Branch has witnessed the pain of cancer up close and was inspired to make a difference. At 17, the senior at Chicago’s Morgan Park High School is already contributing to the field of cancer research. She wanted to know why cancer rates are so high among some groups, and lower in others.

As an eighth grader, Branch’s grandmother was diagnosed with late-stage cancer. As she watched helplessly as her grandmother withered away and finally succumbed to the disease. Branch, who had very little knowledge about biology at the time, was left devastated by her death. That same year her trusted school counselor, Dorothy Connie, was diagnosed with breast cancer, but survived.

While her grandmother’s death sparked the National Honor Society president’s interest in cancer, her academic counselor’s survival gave her the push to do the research.

Last summer, Branch worked full time —280 hours—on her research that examines disparities in breast and cervical cancer testing rates among African-American and Latina women. Her research shows education, insurance, and knowledge about breast and cervical cancer influence whether African American women get screened.

“This information can help design effective intervention programs that keep within the social and cultural framework of different populations. The goal is to reduce the racial disparities in the breast and cervical cancer between African American and white women in Chicago,” she said.

While her research used data from the Chicago REACH Out Program and the American Cancer Society to focus on African American and Latina women, “because both are negatively affected by racial disparities in cancer,” Branch was surprised to learn only insurance was a barrier in Latina low screening numbers.

She is one of 60 high school students from across the country selected as regional finalists to compete for the Young Epidemiology Scholars (YES) grand prize, a $50,000 public health research scholarship.

The high school valedictorian presented her research April 17, 2011 to a national panel of leading public health experts in Washington D.C. It was an experience the teen says she will never forget.

“Throughout the competition, I learned the importance of epidemiology research to people’s health, and how different factors impact certain diseases or injuries in communities across the country. Through my peers, my mind and eyes were opened to the world of public health and this experience will be with me forever.”

Branch’s research earned her a $15,000 scholarship. She plans to attend Washington University in St. Louis next fall to study biomedical engineering and continue her cancer research.

“The most intriguing feature of cancer research is that it reminds me of an abyss. It seems to be a never-ending hole of discovery to uncover. I feel like conducting cancer research is something that will always be exciting. There are limitless opportunities in cancer research. I feel like I can make a difference if I go that route,” Branch said.

Lynette Summerill is an award-winning writer who lives in Scottsdale, Arizona. In addition to writing about cancer-related issues for EmpowHER, her work has been seen in newspapers and magazines around the world.

Sources: Branch, Jazmin. Personal interview. May 12, 2011
PRNewswire Release. http://multivu.prnewswire.com/mnr/yes-competition/49206/

Reviewed May 19, 2011
Edited by Alison Stanton

Add a Comment2 Comments

EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

I love to see our young people use their minds

May 21, 2011 - 1:03am
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

While I commend this young lady for her devotion to this research it is ultimately nothing that we didn't already know, and for quite some time now. Any further research should be directed at just how to communicate effectively to these specific groups of individuals and bridge the education gap. Effectively determining why these women fail to receive this information and correcting that fatal flaw could save many lives.

May 20, 2011 - 11:33am
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