Friday, May 16, 2008

Lung Cancer Still Lowest in Federal Funding

The latest Washington Brief from Lung Cancer Alliance: Research Funding Per Death Drops More in 2007

DOWNLOAD NEW FACT SHEET ON LUNG CANCER! (.pdf)

Washington, DC [May 16, 2008]--While lung cancer causes one in three cancer deaths, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) invested less than 5% of its $4.8 billion budget in lung cancer research in 2007, according to updated statistics issued by Lung Cancer Alliance (LCA) today.

The two other federal agencies with significant cancer research programs – Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Department of Defense (DOD) – have no money earmarked for lung cancer in 2007.

Expressed in dollars per death, research funding through these three federal sources in 2007 totaled $23,754 for breast cancer, $11,959 for prostate cancer and $5,500 for colon cancer. Lung cancer research spending was $1,414 per death, a 23% drop from $1,829 in research funding per death in 2005.

Read the rest here.

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