By Bill Ward • bill.ward@startribune.com
After starving herself for two days, Lori Linder of Corcoran savored cream of mushroom soup. James Koci of Wausau, Wis., went for extra-crispy KFC. Robbe Christensen of Farmington walked across the street for a Butter Burger and fries from Culver's.
One of the most satisfying meals of their lives was a just reward after enduring a procedure that's as daunting as it is effective: a colonoscopy.
The baby boomer generation — 8,000 of whom turn 50 every day — is embracing this dreaded procedure. The mere talk of a colonoscopy used to be taboo. For some boomers, it feels like an unwelcomed rite of passage that means they've reached old age. But health experts have ramped up the conversation, using new tactics to persuade patients that it's worth the discomfort. While there's still push-back, the chatter — combined with an aging populace — has put the procedure in the spotlight like never before.
The Minnesota Department of Health is confronting the issue with a series of billboards, including a risqué, anatomically impossible one, which has to be seen to be believed. On Sunday, runners will be out in full force for a 5K fundraiser in Edina called Get Your Rear in Gear, sponsored by the nonprofit Colon Cancer Coalition.
The message: These things work. Sixty percent of colorectal cancer deaths could have been prevented with proper screening.
"Colonoscopies are probably the best tool we have for finding and treating a cancer," said Dr. Anne Pereira, an internist at Hennepin County Medical Center. "Among prostate, breast and colon screening, colon is the one we do the best job with … because it's so easy to treat. People shouldn't die from colon cancer."
Even so, it's still difficult to get some people to care. Pereira said only about two-thirds of her patients follow through on colonoscopy recommendations. Even among those who seem fully committed, Minnesota Gastroenterology has about 1,000 "no shows" every year.