According to a recent study that was just published in BMJ Oncology, cancer rates among people under 50 have skyrocketed globally. According to the researchers’ analysis of data from 204 nations between 1990 and 2019, the number of new cancer cases has increased by about 79 % over the past 30 years.
According to The New York Post:
The researchers looked at the prevalence of 29 cancers in 204 countries or regions using data from the Global Burden of Disease 2019 study, which examined the number of new cases, deaths, post-mortem health effects, and risk factors for people between the ages of 14 and 49.
According to a team of researchers from Zhejiang University School of Medicine and the University of Edinburgh’s Usher Institute, early-onset cancer cases in that age group reached 3.26 million in 2019 alone, an increase of 79.1 % since 1990.
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Since 1990, the study’s authors have also noticed a rise in cancer-related deaths of 27.7 %. Some of the higher mortality rates were caused by breast, trachea, lung, digestive, and stomach cancers.
According to the researchers, cases of windpipe and prostate cancer have increased the most since 1990, and breast cancer has the highest incidence rate of cases with early-onset liver cancer.
The researchers identified weak diets, alcohol and tobacco use, physical activity, and obesity as the main causes in a CBS Evening News segment.
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Additionally, CBS News:
Breast cancer was the 29 type of cancer that was studied in 2019, with 16.5 % of cases and 12.84 % of deaths occurring at an early stage.
However, over that 30-year period, early-onset prostate cancer and laryngeal cancer both displayed the fastest increases in incident rates of any type of cancer.
According to Dr. Christopher Flowers, an oncologist at the University of Texas’ MD Anderson Cancer Center,” Those numbers are outstanding.”
According to the study, while genetics is a factor in the rise, bad diet, alcohol and tobacco use, physical inactivity, and obesity even play significant roles.
Edward Dowd, the founder of Phinance Technologies and a former portfolio manager for BlackRock, referred to the study as” smart propaganda.”
” Clever propaganda: A study using the years 1990 to 2019… 30 years to get to 79 %, which is 2.63 % annually. Does the study account for the UK disability system’s 35 % rise in excessive cancer claims by 2022? If you’re interested, there is a 15 regular deviation event, according to Dowd.
Clever propaganda: A study that used data from 1990 to 2019… 30 years to reach 79 %, or 2.63 percent annually.
Does the study account for a 35 % rise in unnecessary cancer claims in the UK’s disability system by 2022? Which, in case you are … https :// t.co / mkr4DVsMs9 pic, is a 15 standard deviation event. twitter.com / o5yfR7fjL3
— Edward Dowd(@ DowdEdward) September 6, 2023
Visit BMJ Oncology to read the entire study.
A new study published this week in BMJ Oncology stated cancer rates have skyrocketed worldwide amongst people under 50.The researchers analyzed data from 204 countries between 1990 and 2019, saying there’s roughly a 79% increase in new cancer cases over the last three decades.
The New York Post reports:
Using data from the Global Burden of Disease 2019 study — which looked at the prevalence of 29 cancers in 204 countries or regions — the researchers investigated the number of new cases, deaths, subsequent health repercussions and risk factors for people aged 14 to 49.
In 2019 alone, early-onset cancer cases in that age group totaled 3.26 million, an increase of 79.1% since 1990, according to the team of researchers from Zhejiang University School of Medicine and University of Edinburgh’s Usher Institute.
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The study authors also saw an uptick in cancer-related deaths by 27.7% since 1990. Cancers of the breast, trachea, lung, bowel and stomach had some of the higher mortality rates.
Cases of windpipe and prostate cancer have seen the largest increase since 1990, and breast cancer had the highest incidence rate of early-onset cases, the researchers found, while cases of early-onset liver cancer saw a decline.
According to a CBS Evening News segment, the researchers cited poor diets, alcohol and tobacco use, physical activity, and obesity as primary factors.
WATCH:
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CBS News added:
Of the 29 types of cancer that were studied, breast cancer in 2019 accounted for the most early-onset cases, 16.5%, as well as the most early-onset deaths, 12.84%.
Meanwhile, both early-onset prostate cancer and nasopharyngeal cancer showed the fastest increases in incident rates of any types of cancer over that 30-year period.
“Those numbers are remarkable,” said Dr. Christopher Flowers, an oncologist at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
The study said that while genetics is a contributing factor to the increase, poor diet, alcohol and tobacco use, physical inactivity and obesity also play major roles.
Phinance Technologies founder and former BlackRock portfolio manager Edward Dowd called the study “clever propaganda.”
“Clever propaganda: A study using the dates from 1990 to 2019…30 years to get to 79% which annualized is 2.63% a year. Does the study explain a 35% increase in excess cancer claims in the UK disability system for 2022? Which is a 15 standard deviation event in case you are interested,” Dowd said.
Clever propaganda: A study using the dates from 1990 to 2019…30 years to get to 79% which annualized is 2.63% a year.
Does the study explain a 35% increase in excess cancer claims in the UK disability system for 2022? Which is a 15 standard deviation event in case you are… https://t.co/mkr4DVsMs9 pic.twitter.com/o5yfR7fjL3
— Edward Dowd (@DowdEdward) September 6, 2023
Read the full study at BMJ Oncology.