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The Associated Press
Jun 10, 2003 : 5:28 am ET
NEW YORK -- Former Sen. Edward Brooke, who
became the first black U.S. senator since Reconstruction, is
speaking out on behalf of men who suffer from breast cancer.
Brooke, 83, who was diagnosed with the
disease in September, is encouraging men to perform
self-examinations and advocating that insurance companies cover male
mammograms.
"I know that my talking may be helpful to
other men who are living their lives right now, unaware that they
have this disease," Brooke said in an interview published in The New
York Times on Tuesday.
He said his wife, Anne, discovered a lump on
the right side of his chest. A survivor of the disease herself, she
urged him to consult with a doctor. He underwent a double mastectomy
and is currently free of the cancer.
Breast cancer is rare in men, but a higher
percentage men die of the disease because it is usually discovered
at a later stage.
"Anne probably saved my life," said Brooke.
"If she hadn't looked at that lump, I never would have done anything
about it."
Researchers believe that 1,500 men will be
diagnosed with breast cancer this year and roughly 400 of them will
die of it. The disease is more likely in men older than 50 and black
men are more likely than white men to succumb to it.
Brooke was elected as a Republican to the
Senate from Massachusetts in 1966 and served until losing a
re-election bid in 1978. After practicing law, he retired in 1985
and lives in Virginia.
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