Cancer has surpassed heart disease as the biggest
killer in Australia, according to a new report from the World Health
Organisation (WHO).
The report was last released six years ago and this is the first major international update on the disease since then.
It found that cancer surpassed heart disease as the world's biggest killer in 2011, with 7.87 million cancer deaths compared to 7.02 million from heart disease. Stroke was considered separately.
Global killer
- 8.2 million deaths from cancer in 2012.
- Lung, liver, stomach, colorectal and breast cancers cause most deaths.
- 1.59 million lung cancer deaths in 2012.
- 745,000 liver cancer deaths in 2012.
- Tobacco use is biggest risk factor, accounting for 70 per cent of lung cancer deaths.
- Africa, Asia, Central and South America account for 70 per cent of world's cancer deaths.
In Australia and other Western countries, the rise in cancer cases has been attributed to ageing populations and increased screening.
Lifestyle has also been highlighted as a major factor, with the population of countries such as Australia more likely to have a poor diet, inactive lifestyles and be smokers.
Doctors predict global cancer rates will increase by three-quarters over the next two decades and they expect 20 million new cases by 2025.
Prevention is better than cure
The report says 3.7 million cancer deaths could have been avoided by lifestyle changes, such as quitting smoking, reducing alcohol intake and maintaining a healthy weight."About 5 per cent of all cancers is due to alcohol consumption - that's an important part of the preventable cancer story," said Cancer Council Australia's Terry Slevin.
"Let's make no bones about it, alcohol is a class one known carcinogen, it's listed by the World Health Organisation as such."
Research shows women's risk of breast cancer can increase by having as little as one alcoholic drink a day.
For men, the risk of tumours increases with two to three drinks a day.
Lung cancer was the biggest killer globally. It was also the biggest killer among men, while breast cancer killed more women.
Mr Slevin said lung cancer was an area where treatments were less successful than other areas.
"That's why prevention, when it comes to lung cancer, is so important," he said.
Melanoma continued to be more of a problem in Australia than overseas, with Australians and New Zealanders twice as likely to be diagnosed than anywhere else in the world.
Worldwide there are more than 14 million cancer diagnoses each year, the report found, and it costs the world more than $1 trillion each year.
It says one-fifth of that could be avoided by investing in prevention strategies.
abc.net.au 4 Feb 2014
Cancer is 'given' to the masses via a contaminated food chain from genetically modified foods to chemicals in packaged food prepared by the multinational corporations, not excluding the global junk food empires like McDonald's, Burger King (Hungry Jack's), Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC), Donut King, Wendy's, Subway, Nando's, Coca Cola, cigarette companies like Phillip Morris, and many more that have not been mentioned.
Cancer has a manifestation period that varies from person to person also depending on where the cancer is, with a perceived blame on the recipient and a socially accepted way to die.
Once the usefulness of the 'cannon fodder' expires, now [with the advent of cancer] so can their life.
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