martes, 2 de junio de 2020

The News on Cancer Deaths in the United States: Good, Bad, and Fantastic | | Blogs | CDC

The News on Cancer Deaths in the United States: Good, Bad, and Fantastic | | Blogs | CDC



The News on Cancer Deaths in the United States: Good, Bad, and Fantastic

Posted on  by DCPC
Jane Henley, MSPH

The Good News: Cancer Death Rates Keep Dropping

Death rates from cancer dropped 26 percent from 1999 to 2018.
We continue to see declines in the rate of cancer deaths (the number of people who die from cancer for every 100,000 people).
The three biggest keys to lowering cancer death rates are:
  • Making sure people aren’t exposed to things that raise the chance of getting cancer.
  • Getting more people screened for cancer as recommended.
  • Improving cancer treatments and making sure people get them.

The Bad News: People Still Die from Cancer

Although cancer deaths are going down, people still do die from cancer. In 2018, just shy of 600,000 people died from cancer, including about 1,200 children under 15 and 9,200 young people between ages 15 and 39. We still lose too many people to cancers that are often thought of as highly curable. In 2018 alone, more than 42,000 women died from breast cancer and 31,000 men died from prostate cancer. Too often, people die after enduring years of brutal therapy.
We remember all those who have died from cancer and the friends and family who love and miss them. It’s time to “wipe our tears away [and] put science to work” so that even fewer people suffer from cancer.

Lung Cancer Is Still the Top Cause of Cancer Death, But There’s Hope

While lung cancer still claims more lives than any other type of cancer, death rates have dropped 37% in 20 years (from 1999 to 2018), showing the tremendous success of tobacco control. In 1964, when the first Surgeon General’s report on the health consequences of smoking was published, 42% of adults smoked. This has dropped to 14%, and about two-thirds of them want to quit.Fewer people smoking cigarettes means fewer cancer deaths.
This year’s Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer found that tobacco use causes stark disparities in health outcomes. For example, surveys show that 20% of adults in small towns smoke compared to 13% in cities. In 2018, the lung cancer death rate was 30% higher in small towns than in cities.
Lung cancer screening is recommended for people at high risk because of their age and smoking history, but recent research shows that 7 out of 8 adults haven’t been screened as recommended. Making sure that the right people get lung cancer screening at the right time can cut lung cancer deaths by 20%.
Breakthroughs in treatment can now pinpoint a patient’s exact type of lung cancer, allowing doctors to personalize their treatment for the best chance of success.

The Fantastic News: More People Are Beating Cancer

More people are living beyond cancer than ever before. In the past 15 years, 11 million people were told they have cancer and are still alive today.
Still, surviving cancer often takes a physical, mental, emotional, social, and financial toll. To help answer questions that many cancer survivors have, CDC developed a simulation named Linda, a cancer survivor who gives advice on making healthy choices about alcohol, tobacco, anxiety and distress, and physical activity and nutrition.
CDC works with agencies and organizations across the country to find ways to prevent people from getting cancer. And we work with states to keep track of the number of people who get and die from cancer, to find out if those ideas work. Together, we can go beyond reducing the number of people who die from cancer—to stop people from ever getting cancer at all.
Posted on  by DCPC

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