WASHINGTON: Half of all cancers could be prevented if people just
adopted healthier behaviours, US scientists argued on Wednesday.
Smoking is blamed for a third of all US cancer cases and being
overweight leads to another 20 percent of the deadly burden that costs the
United States some $226 billion per year in health care expenses and lost
productivity.
For instance, up to three quarters of US lung cancer cases could be
avoided if people did not smoke, said the article in the US journal Science
Translational Medicine.
Science has shown that plenty of other cancers can also be prevented,
either with vaccines to prevent human papillomavirus and hepatitis, which can
cause cervical and liver cancers, or by protecting against sun exposure, which
can cause skin cancer.
Society as a whole must recognise the need for these changes and take
seriously an attempt to instil healthier habits, said the researchers.
"It's time we made an investment in implementing what we know,"
said lead author Graham Colditz, an epidemiologist at the Siteman Cancer Centre
at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri.
Exercising, eating right and refraining from smoking are key ways to
prevent up to half of the 577,000 deaths from cancer in the United States
expected this year, a toll that is second only to heart disease, according to
the study.
But a series of obstacles to change are well enshrined in the United
States, which will see an estimated 1,638,910 new cancer cases diagnosed this
year.
Those hurdles include skepticism that cancer can be prevented and the
habit of intervening too late in life to stop or prevent cancer that has
already taken root.
Also, much of the research on cancer focuses on treatment instead of
prevention, and tends to take a short-term view rather than a long-term
approach.
"Humans are impatient, and that human trait itself is an obstacle
to cancer prevention," said the study.
Further complicating those factors are the income gaps between the
upper and lower social classes that mean poor people tend to be more exposed to
cancer risk factors than the wealthy.
"Pollution and crime, poor public transportation, lack of parks
for play and exercise, and absence of nearby supermarkets for fresh food hinder
the adoption and sustained practice of a lifestyle that minimises the risk of
cancer and other diseases," said the study.
"As in other countries, social stratification in the United States
exacerbates lifestyle differences such as access to health care, especially
prevention and early detection services.
"Mammograms, colon screening, diet and nutrition support, smoking
cessation resources and sun protection mechanisms are simply less available to
the poor."
That means any bid to overcome deep social imbalances must be supported
by policy changes, said co-author Sarah Gehlert, professor of racial and ethnic
diversity at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work and the School of
Medicine.
"After working in public health for 25 years, I've learned that if
we want to change health, we need to change policy," she said.
"Stricter tobacco policy is a good example. But we can't make
policy change on our own. We can tell the story, but it requires a critical
mass of people to talk more forcefully about the need for change."
A separate annual report by the Centres for Disease Control and
Prevention and other major US cancer groups found that death rates from cancer
in the United States continued to decline between 1.3 and 1.7 percent from 1998
to 2008.
New cancer diagnoses also decreased less than one percent per year from
1996 to 2006 and levelled off from 2006 to 2008.
However, the Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer also
highlighted the problem of obesity-related cancers, such as colorectal cancer,
as well as cancer of the kidney, esophagus, pancreas, breast and endometrial
lining.
"If you watch your diet, exercise, and manage your weight, you can
not only prevent your risk of getting many lethal forms of cancer, you will
also increase your chances of doing well if you should get almost any form of
cancer," counselled Edward Benz, president of the Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute in Boston.
- AFP/de
No comments:
Post a Comment