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Jill Biden to host a roundtable on breast cancer

Jill Biden to host a roundtable on breast cancer

Newslooks- WASHINGTON (AP)

First lady Jill Biden will host a roundtable Monday on breast and cervical cancer, part of the administration’s “moonshot” effort to reduce deaths from cancer, the White House said. The event is one of many being launched by the American Cancer Society. Singer Mary J. Blige, an advocate for cancer screening, will participate in the roundtable with Biden.

First lady Jill Biden gestures while meeting with medical professionals and students during a visit to the University of California San Francisco Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center in San Francisco, Friday, Oct. 7, 2022. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, Pool)

President Joe Biden announced in February his goal of halving cancer deaths in the next 25 years. The issue is personal for Biden, whose son Beau Biden died in 2015 of brain cancer. Biden launched the cancer moonshot the following year when serving as then-President Barack Obama’s vice president.

Mary J. Blige attends the TIME100 Gala
Evan Agostini/Invision/AP Mary J. Blige attends the TIME100 Gala at Lincoln Center in New York.

Jill Biden is giving a star-powered boost to the launch of a new effort tied to President Biden’s “cancer moonshot” initiative, teaming up with singer Mary J. Blige for a roundtable event. The “Family Affair” songstress will join Jill Biden on Monday to kick off the American Cancer Society’s National Roundtables on Breast and Cervical Cancer, the White House announced Friday.

The series of roundtable discussions is aimed at bringing together “leading organizations and experts to drive progress and improve the lives of people living with cancer, as well as support their families,” according to the White House.

The Bidens — who first began the cancer moonshot initiative in 2016 — relaunched it in February with the goal of cutting the cancer death rate in half over the next 25 years. The then-vice president’s son, Beau Biden, died in 2015 from glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer.

Blige, 51, has been an advocate for preventative cancer screenings. The Grammy Award winner said last year that several of her close family members had died from breast, cervical and lung cancer.

“I didn’t know about breast cancer or mammograms until I was 40 and I was in the music business and I was trying to take care of myself,” Blige said in 2021, according to Essence magazine. “My body started talking so I started listening.”

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