The Gazette Daily News Podcast

Gazette Daily News Podcast: April 1, 2024


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Cancer in Iowa: Iowa changing the way it looks for cancer clusters

Cancer in Iowa: Here’s how Iowans are battling the state’s dire cancer rates

Iowa will no longer have park rangers under plan

Episode Transcript

Welcome to The Gazette’s Daily News Podcast for Monday, April 1, 2024.

This podcast provides the latest headlines from the Gazette newsroom. I’m Becky

Lutgen Gardner.


First, Cancer in Iowa: Iowa is changing how it looks

for cancer clusters. That includes screening tests, proposed policies, and

personal advocacy to help move the needle in the fight against Iowa’s high

cancer rates.


In 2023, Iowa’s cancer rates soared to the second highest in the country.


The Iowa Cancer Registry has investigated 150 suspected

cancer cluster cases since 1994.


But only one investigation near Wellman resulted in a

confirmed cluster finding.


Researchers now want to reverse the cluster

investigation process by identifying locations with known contamination and then

studying cancer rates nearby.


The CDC also has new cancer cluster guidelines recommending

tracking communities to see if the disease develops over time.


Gary Streit helped

co-found the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network in 1977. And then was

diagnosed in 2016 with prostate cancer.


Within months, he had surgery to remove his prostate. Every year, he

participates in the American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life to fundraise for

fighting cancer. Last year, he walked 30 miles to raise more than $100,000.


He says of his advocacy, “If I broke my arm, I’d tell people about it.

People need to get past the stigma — have to get past the fear.”

 

Other Iowans are fighting cancer in their own ways. They’re calling for

more screening tests to detect and treat cancer earlier. Though few are gaining

traction with lawmakers, they’re proposing policies that help prevent cancer.

And they’re assuming another powerful role: advocates who can raise awareness

and demand change, all in the name of keeping Iowa’s population safer and

healthier.

Finally, Iowa’s state parks will no longer have park rangers under

a new alignment plan being executed by the Iowa Department of Natural

Resources.

The department confirmed that rangers at Iowa’s 69 state parks will gradually be classified as conservation officers assigned to one or more counties rather than assigned to

a specific state park or parks. Iowa DNR spokeswoman

Tammie Krausman said, “Under alignment, State Park Managers and Natural

Resource Technicians will exclusively handle state park operations, allowing

DNR’s sworn peace officers to solely focus on law enforcement tasks,”

But park advocates say the change will mean reduced law

enforcement presence at state parks, which, in the summer, become hubs of

activity that can involve overconsumption of alcohol, unsafe boating and

criminal activity.

Dawn Bill is president of Friends of Pilot Knob, a group that supports 

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