Prostate
Puzzle
(continued)
A primary care background
Trained
on three continents, Vijayakumar earned his medical degree at SV
University in Tirupati, India, and completed his surgical and radiation
oncology training at the University of Madras in Madras, India.
He completed a second residency in radiation oncology at Michael
Reese Hospital and Medical Center, where he was chief resident for
two years. He received additional training in brachytherapy, also
known as radioactive seed implant therapy, in France.
Vijayakumar traces his prevention focus to his years as an oncology
resident in India. Medical residents were paid 300 rupees a month,
or about $30, roughly half the income a single person needed to
live. To make ends meet, Vijayakumar ran a 24-hour primary care
clinic, charging impoverished patients three rupees a visit, or
about 30 cents, and wealthy patients about 100 rupees. He hired
another physician to staff the clinic during the day, staffing it
himself nights and weekends — stitching up knife wounds, tending
to patients with tuberculosis, and making house calls to care for
typhoid patients. “That background,” he says, “made
me see the value of prevention.”
Upon arriving in the United States, the young doctor who once overcharged
his rich patients to subsidize the poor ones was dismayed to find
that social disparities in health care also existed here.
African-American men are diagnosed with prostate cancer at more
advanced stages of the disease than white men, and are twice as
likely to die of the disease.
For Vijayakumar, a focus on prostate cancer — preventing it,
and finding out why black men suffer disproportionately from it
-— came naturally.
Soon after settling in Chicago, he began visiting African-American
churches on the city’s South Side on Sundays, preaching prostate
cancer awareness and early detection. During the week, when he wasn’t
treating patients or teaching medicine, he pursued his prostate
cancer population and prevention research, along with more traditional
radiation oncology studies. Over the past decade, Vijayakumar has
published more than a dozen scientific articles on prostate cancer
and race.
“Why is the incidence of prostate cancer higher among African-American
men? Why is the overall outcome poorer in African-American prostate
cancer patients? These are open questions,” Vijayakumar says.
“We have to answer them.”
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