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Cancer-Death Racial Gap Narrows   

But the rate is still higher for black Americans   


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For a long time, blacks have died of cancer at higher rates than other Americans. But a new report says the gap is narrowing.

Nearly 30 years ago, black men had a 47 percent higher cancer death rate than white men; now it's 19 percent higher. Black women had a 19 percent greater cancer death rate; now it's 13 percent.

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Cancer deaths have dropped for all Americans, but the rates have fallen faster among blacks than whites. The biggest declines were in lung, prostate and colon cancers.

Experts say the main reason is that smoking rates fell more dramatically among blacks in the past 40 years and that's paying off in fewer deaths now. Another reason is that more black Americans are getting screened.

The American Cancer Society released a report Thursday on the trends.

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