Changeflow GovPing Healthcare Tennessee Promotes Breast and Lung Cancer Early...
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Tennessee Promotes Breast and Lung Cancer Early Detection

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Published October 24th, 2025
Detected March 17th, 2026
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Summary

The Tennessee Department of Health is promoting breast and lung cancer awareness through its annual Pink & Pearl Campaign. The campaign highlights the importance of early detection and screening, referencing USPSTF guidelines and available screening programs.

What changed

The Tennessee Department of Health has launched its annual Pink & Pearl Campaign to promote early detection of breast and lung cancer. The campaign emphasizes reducing cancer deaths through decreased risk factors, accessible early interventions, and awareness. It references current United States Preventative Services Task Force (USPSTF) guidelines for mammogram screenings starting at age 40 and lung cancer screenings for adults aged 50-80 with a significant smoking history.

While this is primarily an awareness campaign, regulated entities and healthcare providers should be aware of the USPSTF guidelines referenced, as they inform recommended screening practices. The Tennessee Breast and Cervical Screening Program (TBSCP) is highlighted as a resource for uninsured and underinsured individuals, and local health departments can provide further information. The campaign encourages public participation on November 7, 2025, by wearing pink and pearls and using social media hashtags.

Source document (simplified)

Early Detection is the Best Protection Against Breast & Lung Cancer

Tennessee Celebrating Annual Pink & Pearl Campaign in October and November
Friday, October 24, 2025 | 11:55am NASHVILLE – This October and November, the Tennessee Department of Health is promoting breast and lung cancer awareness with the annual Pink & Pearl Campaign.

The campaign combines the pink ribbon, a recognized symbol for breast cancer awareness, with the pearl ribbon representing lung cancer awareness. While breast cancer is the most common new cancer in female Tennesseans, lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death.

“The Pink & Pearl Campaign highlights Tennessee’s leading cause of cancer and the most common cause of cancer deaths,” Tennessee Health Commissioner John Dunn, said. “We can reduce the number of breast and lung cancer deaths in Tennessee by decreasing risk factors, like tobacco use, making early interventions and screening more accessible, raising awareness, and removing barriers to care.”

Routine cancer screenings increase the chance of early detection when more treatment options are available, which may increase one's chance of survival.

The current United States Preventative Services Task Force (USPSTF) guidelines recommend women begin regular mammogram screenings at the age of 40. Depending on risk factors, some women need to start screening at an earlier age.

The USPSTF recommends annual screening for lung cancer in adults ages 50 to 80 with a 20 pack- year smoking history and currently smoke or have quit smoking within the past 15 years.

You may qualify for free breast cancer screenings through the Tennessee Breast and Cervical Screening Program (TBSCP). TBCSP provides breast and cervical screening services to uninsured and underinsured women and diagnostic testing for qualifying men and women.

Learn more at the TBSCP webpage or contact your local health department for more information.

On Friday, Nov. 7, 2025, Pink & Pearl Day, Tennesseans can support the campaign by wearing pink and pearls and sharing pictures on social media using the campaign hashtags #TNPinkandPearl and #MyPinkandPearlWhy.

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
State Health
Published
October 24th, 2025
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Consumers Public health authorities
Geographic scope
State (Tennessee)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Public Health Consumer Protection

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