Wednesday, July 10, 2024

071024 Cancer is Personal to Me...

Cancer is personal to me…

I HATE Cancer!

 

Cancer took my mother and mother-in-law and

Earlier this year a great American Patriot

Singer-songwriter Toby Keith.

 

Do You Have a Cancer Benefit in Place?

 

I would be happy to assist you with

This valuable benefit today!

 

I am an authorized representative

Of Mutual of Omaha, Omaha, NE

to offer this much needed coverage.

 

After you are diagnosed it’s too late

To get coverage…

 

Now is the time to get covered!

 

It’s one benefit you can receive

Before death to use how ever

You desire…

 

***

 

2024 Cancer Facts & Figures Cancer

2024--First Year the US Expects More

than 2M New Cases of Cancer

 

Over the last 30 years, the risk of dying from cancer has steadily declined,

sparing some 4 million lives in the United States. This downward trend can

partially be explained by big wins in smoking cessation, early cancer detection,

and treatment advancements.

 

Cancer incidence, however, is on the rise for many common cancers.

In the coming year, we’re expecting to hit a bleak milestone…

the first-time new cases of cancer in the US are expected to cross the

2-million mark. That’s almost 5,500 cancer diagnoses a day. 

 

This trend is largely affected by the aging and growth of the population

and by a rise in diagnoses of 6 of the 10 most common cancers…

breast, prostate, endometrial, pancreatic, kidney, and melanoma.

(The other 4 top 10 cancers are lung, colon and rectum, bladder,

and non-Hodgkin lymphoma.)

 

In 2024, over 611,000 deaths from cancer are projected for the US.

That’s more than 1,600 deaths from cancer each day.

Rising incidences of some of the most common cancers, some that are related

to excess body weight, may halt the decline in cancer mortality soon.

 

Although the cancer death rate has been on the decline, rising diagnoses

 of 6 of the most common cancers

(breast, prostate, endometrial, pancreatic, kidney, and melanoma) threaten that

longstanding downward trend. Put simply, that’s because when more people are

diagnosed with cancer, more people are likely to die because of cancer.

 

Some types of cancer aren’t increasing in overall incidence but are increasing in

subgroups.

These include…

Colorectal cancer in people younger than age 55

Liver cancer in women

Oral cancers associated with HPV

Cervical cancer in women ages 30 through 44

 

Although there aren't ways to detect most cancers early, four of the cancers with

increasing trends have screening tests (breast, prostate, colorectal, and cervical). 

Colorectal and cervical cancer screening can actually prevent cancer altogether by

detecting precancerous lesions that can be removed.

 

The risk of developing 6 of the cancers on the rise is associated with excess body

weight. Listed in order of strength of the association, those 6 cancers are

endometrial, liver, kidney, pancreas, colorectal, and breast.

 

What might be most striking about the rising incidence is that it’s affecting

Increasingly younger people.

 

Cancer patients are getting younger.

Cancer risk increases with age, and people most likely to be diagnosed with cancer

are adults age 65 and older. But this trend is beginning to change.

 

People age 65 and older (sometimes referred to as older adults) represent a growing

proportion of the overall population, but their numbers are shrinking in the proportion

of new cancer cases. In 1995, people age 65 and older accounted for 61% of cancer

diagnoses and during 2019 to 2020 their contribution dropped to 58%.

 

In contrast, people ages 50 to 64 (sometimes referred to as middle-aged adults) are

growing in numbers for both the population at large and the population of people with

cancer. This shift toward middle-aged patients reflects both steep decreases in the

incidence of prostate cancer and smoking-related cancers in older men and increasing

incidence in men and women born since the 1950s. Although some of this increase is

probably because of the obesity epidemic, there are thought to be other unknown

causes as well. 

 

 

 

The proportion of people under age 50 (sometimes referred to as younger adults) 

diagnosed with cancer dropped from 15% to 12% because of their shrinking

representation in the general population (from 74% to 64%). Interestingly, though,

they were the only one of the three age groups with an increase in overall cancer

incidence from 1995 to 2020. 

 

Especially notable is the rise in colorectal cancer diagnoses among people

Younger than 50. In the late 1990s, colorectal cancer was the fourth leading cause

of cancer death in both men and women in this age group, and now, it is the first

cause of cancer death in men younger than 50 and the second cause in women

that age.

 

The cause of the rise of colorectal cancer cases in younger adults remains

Unexplained but likely reflects changes in lifestyle exposures that begin with

generations born around 1950, the authors say.

 

Almost 1 out of 3 people diagnosed with colorectal cancer before age 50 have a

Family history or genetic predisposition. People who know they have a family

History of this disease should begin colorectal cancer screening before age 45.

 

Cervical cancer is increasing in incidence in an even younger population…

women ages 30 to 44. (In contrast, the incidence of cervical cancer in women who

were among the first groups to have received the HPV vaccine

who are now ages 20 to 24 declined 11% a year between 2012 and 2019.) 

 

Progress against cancer lags in communities of color.

 

Racial disparities in cancer are striking and persistent. In fact, the death rate for

Black people with prostate, stomach, and uterine cancers is double that for White

people. Similarly, American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) people have 2 times

higher death rates for liver, stomach, or kidney cancer than White people.

 

These are a few more critical statistics about cancer and race:

 

Black men have the highest overall cancer death rate, which is 19% higher than

that of White men. This difference is largely driven by prostate cancer death rates for

Black men, which are twice that of any other group.

 

AIAN people have the highest overall incidence and mortality rate in men and women

combined. Alaska Native people have the highest colorectal cancer incidence and

mortality in the world.

 

Hispanic people have lower rates of the most common cancers, such as breast and

prostate, compared to non-Hispanic Whites, but they have one of the highest rates

of infection-related cancers. For example, cervical cancer incidence…

caused by HPV infection… is 35% higher in Hispanic women than in White women.

Black women with endometrial cancer have a death rate that is 2 times higher than

White women despite similar incidence of the disease, partly because they are

diagnosed later and have worse survival.

 

The advances in treatment and earlier detection that have decreased death rates

overall, have not benefitted everyone equally. The obstacles to living a healthy life

and getting a timely cancer diagnosis are far greater in minority communities than

in White communities.

 

“These populations have been subject to racial discrimination for hundreds of years.

The resulting inequality in wealth has resulted in less access to fresh food, safe

places to live and exercise, and receipt of high-quality cancer prevention, early

detection, and treatment,” Siegel says.

 

The Cancer Statistics, 2024 study authors note, “Segregationist and discriminatory

policies in criminal justice, housing, education, and employment continue to alter the

balance of prosperity even today.”

 

Written by: Sonya Collins

 

https://www.cancer.org/research/acs-research-news/facts-and-figures-2024.html

 

 

Hayden Childs

Alabama Licensed Agent

(205) 269-1382

Shcmail34@yahoo.com

www.haydenchilds.net

 

You never regret doing

The right thing…

 

Don’t live to regret not having

Coverage…

 

Several years ago, I shared

With a brother in Christ

A Cancer Benefit.

 

He chose not to get

The coverage.

 

Sadly, he eventually was

Diagnosed with and died

because of Cancer.

 

 

That policy would have

Been a blessing to him

And to his family.

 

Don’t let this happen

To YOU!

 

Contact Me Today!

 


 

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