Our Daughters, Our Duty

What is more important than the health of our children?
We have many options to reduce the risk of cancer from a healthier diet to prevention therapies. The more information we know about individual cancers, the better we can help ourselves and our children.

Community Engagement Centering on Solutions (CECOS) and Richard J. Daley College are offering you an opportunity to learn more about cervical cancer, and its threat to the women of our community. (CECOS is a program of the University of Chicago Cancer Research Center.)

Join us on Saturday, November 7 at Richard Daley College from 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM. Dr. Rick Kittles, Associate Director for Diversity and Community Outreach, and Dr. Kenneth Alexander, noted HPV researcher and Associate Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Chicago, will help us understand the role of the human papillomavirus (HPV) in cancer and how we can protect our families and friends.

The town hall meeting will include discussion of a new vaccine that is effective in preventing cervical cancer. HPV causes more than 99% of all cervical cancers and 100% of genital warts. The vaccine is effective for the types of viruses that cause 70% of cervical cancers and 90% of genital warts.
We recognize that some people have concerns about the vaccine, and we wish to address these issues together in a thoughtful exchange of ideas.

Please come to our town hall meeting for invaluable information, lively discussion, and refreshments.


What: Our Daughters, Our Duty
When: Saturday, November 7, 2009
10:00 AM to 1:00 PM
Where: Richard J. Daley College,
One of the City Colleges of Chicago
7500 South Pulaski Road
Chicago, Illinois 60652
Please call Healthlink 773-702-9200 to RSVP.

Sponsors:

American Cancer Society, MAGIC, University of Chicago Cancer Research Center, NCICCC (a comprehensive Cancer Center designated by the National Cancer Institute), Daley College and Daley College School of Nursing

Also sponsored by the Medical Center Office of Community Affairs and the
University of Chicago Institute of Translational Medicine