💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 875.gmi captured on 2022-07-16 at 18:25:41. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2021-12-05)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
By MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer Mike Stobbe, Ap Medical Writer Tue Dec 9,
5:43 pm ET
ATLANTA Cancer will overtake heart disease as the world's top killer by 2010,
part of a trend that should more than double global cancer cases and deaths by
2030, international health experts said in a report released Tuesday. Rising
tobacco use in developing countries is believed to be a huge reason for the
shift, particularly in China and India, where 40 percent of the world's smokers
now live.
So is better diagnosing of cancer, along with the downward trend in infectious
diseases that used to be the world's leading killers.
Cancer diagnoses around the world have steadily been rising and are expected to
hit 12 million this year. Global cancer deaths are expected to reach 7 million,
according to the new report by the World Health Organization.
An annual rise of 1 percent in cases and deaths is expected with even larger
increases in China, Russia and India. That means new cancer cases will likely
mushroom to 27 million annually by 2030, with deaths hitting 17 million.
Underlying all this is an expected expansion of the world's population there
will be more people around to get cancer.
By 2030, there could be 75 million people living with cancer around the world,
a number that many health care systems are not equipped to handle.
"This is going to present an amazing problem at every level in every society
worldwide," said Peter Boyle, director of the WHO's International Agency for
Research on Cancer.
Boyle spoke at a news conference with officials from the American Cancer
Society, the Lance Armstrong Foundation, Susan G. Komen for the Cure and the
National Cancer Institute of Mexico.
The "unprecedented" gathering of organizations is an attempt to draw attention
to the global threat of cancer, which isn't recognized as a major, growing
health problem in some developing countries.
"Where you live shouldn't determine whether you live," said Hala Moddelmog,
Komen's chief executive.
The organizations are calling on governments to act, asking the U.S. to help
fund cervical cancer vaccinations and to ratify an international tobacco
control treaty.
Concerned about smoking's impact on cancer rates in developing countries in the
decades to come, the American Cancer Society also announced it will provide a
smoking cessation counseling service in India.
"If we take action, we can keep the numbers from going where they would
otherwise go," said John Seffrin, the cancer society's chief executive officer.
Other groups are also voicing support for more action.
"Cancer is one of the greatest untold health crises of the developing world,"
said Dr. Douglas Blayney, president-elect of the American Society of Clinical
Oncology.
"Few are aware that cancer already kills more people in poor countries than
HIV, malaria and tuberculosis combined. And if current smoking trends continue,
the problem will get significantly worse," he said in a written statement.