Bill Text: OH SCR10 | 2013-2014 | 130th General Assembly | Comm Sub
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: To memorialize the Congress of the United States to seek the withdrawal of the United States Preventive Services Task Force recommendation against prostate-specific antigen-based screening for prostate cancer for men in all age groups.
Spectrum: Moderate Partisan Bill (Republican 52-17)
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2014-01-29 - Concurrence [SCR10 Detail]
Download: Ohio-2013-SCR10-Comm_Sub.html
As Reported by the Senate Medicaid, Health and Human Services Committee
A CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SENATE OF THE STATE OF OHIO
(THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES CONCURRING):
Bill Title: To memorialize the Congress of the United States to seek the withdrawal of the United States Preventive Services Task Force recommendation against prostate-specific antigen-based screening for prostate cancer for men in all age groups.
Spectrum: Moderate Partisan Bill (Republican 52-17)
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2014-01-29 - Concurrence [SCR10 Detail]
Download: Ohio-2013-SCR10-Comm_Sub.html
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Senator Burke
Cosponsors:
Senators Brown, Gardner, Tavares
To memorialize the Congress of the United States to | 1 |
seek the withdrawal of the United States | 2 |
Preventive Services Task Force recommendation | 3 |
against prostate-specific antigen-based screening | 4 |
for prostate cancer for men in all age groups. | 5 |
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SENATE OF THE STATE OF OHIO
(THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES CONCURRING):
WHEREAS, The United States Preventive Services Task Force | 6 |
(USPSTF) is an independent panel of nonfederal experts in | 7 |
prevention and evidence-based medicine that is composed of primary | 8 |
care physicians; and | 9 |
WHEREAS, The USPSTF members are appointed by the United | 10 |
States Department of Health and Human Services to conduct | 11 |
scientific evidence reviews of a broad range of clinical health | 12 |
care preventive services and develop recommendations for primary | 13 |
care clinicians and health systems; and | 14 |
WHEREAS, The USPSTF acknowledges that prostate cancer is the | 15 |
most commonly diagnosed nonskin cancer in men in the United | 16 |
States, with one in six American men being diagnosed with prostate | 17 |
cancer in his lifetime; and | 18 |
WHEREAS, Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of | 19 |
cancer-related deaths in men in the United States; and | 20 |
WHEREAS, The American Cancer Society estimates that in 2013 | 21 |
approximately 238,590 men in the United States will be diagnosed | 22 |
with prostate cancer and 29,720 men will die from the disease; and | 23 |
WHEREAS, In Ohio alone, there are approximately 7,961 newly | 24 |
diagnosed cases of prostate cancer and 1,232 deaths from the | 25 |
disease on an annual basis, according to the February 2011 report | 26 |
issued by the Ohio Cancer Incidence Surveillance System; and | 27 |
WHEREAS, In 2008, the USPSTF recommended against | 28 |
prostate-specific antigen-based screening for prostate cancer for | 29 |
men ages 75 and older; and | 30 |
WHEREAS, In October 2011, the USPSTF issued a new | 31 |
recommendation against prostate-specific antigen-based screening | 32 |
for prostate cancer for men in all age groups, because it | 33 |
concluded that there is moderate or high certainty that the | 34 |
service has no net benefit or that the harms outweigh the | 35 |
benefits; and | 36 |
WHEREAS, The USPSTF states that the October 2011 | 37 |
recommendation applies to men in the United States who do not have | 38 |
symptoms of prostate cancer, even though by the time a man | 39 |
experiences symptoms of prostate cancer, the cancer is generally | 40 |
too advanced to cure; and | 41 |
WHEREAS, The USPSTF states that its recommendation against | 42 |
screening applies regardless of race, even though the USPSTF | 43 |
acknowledges that African-American men have a substantially higher | 44 |
prostate cancer incidence rate than Caucasian men and more than | 45 |
twice the prostate cancer mortality rate of Caucasian men; and | 46 |
WHEREAS, The USPSTF issued this recommendation without having | 47 |
a urologist or oncologist, two types of physicians who specialize | 48 |
in diagnosing and treating patients with prostate cancer, on the | 49 |
task force; and | 50 |
WHEREAS, The USPSTF's 2011 recommendation regarding prostate | 51 |
cancer screening follows its recommendation in November 2009 | 52 |
against routine mammograms for women ages 40 to 49 and against | 53 |
teaching women to do breast self-examinations, which Congress | 54 |
rejected after public outcry; and | 55 |
WHEREAS, The most recently updated study, the Goteborg | 56 |
Randomized Population-based Prostate Cancer Screening Trial, found | 57 |
that with screening, deaths from prostate cancer dropped 44 per | 58 |
cent over a 14-year period, compared with men who did not undergo | 59 |
screening, and that prostate cancer screening efficiency was | 60 |
similar to other cancers; and | 61 |
WHEREAS, The USPSTF recommendation against screening puts | 62 |
into harm's way men who are most at risk: the underinsured, those | 63 |
who live in areas where health care is not readily available, | 64 |
those who have a family history of prostate cancer, and | 65 |
African-American men, who have a higher incidence of and higher | 66 |
mortality rate from prostate cancer than Caucasian men; now | 67 |
therefore be it | 68 |
RESOLVED, That we, the members of the 130th General Assembly | 69 |
of the State of Ohio, in adopting this resolution, respectfully | 70 |
memorialize the Congress of the United States to seek the | 71 |
withdrawal of the United States Preventive Services Task Force | 72 |
recommendation against prostate-specific antigen-based screening | 73 |
for prostate cancer for men in all age groups; and be it further | 74 |
RESOLVED, That the Clerk of the Senate transmit duly | 75 |
authenticated copies of this resolution to each member of the Ohio | 76 |
Congressional delegation. | 77 |