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1/2 of all people develop some form of cancer within their lifetime? |
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| Jun1-11, 03:39 AM | #1 |
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1/2 of all people develop some form of cancer within their lifetime?
I believe I read somewhere that roughly 1 in every 2 (half) of ALL people will develop some form of cancer within their lifetime. Those figures seem awfully high, can anyone with an advanced knowledge of medicine confirm or debunk this for me?
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| Jun1-11, 11:16 AM | #2 |
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You're going to have to post your source first, "I believe I read somewhere" isn't good enough.
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| Jun1-11, 11:39 AM | #3 |
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According to the stats from the links below, it is 1 in 3 people will get it and 1 in 4 will die from it.
http://info.cancerresearchuk.org/can...ncidence/risk/ http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=915 |
| Jun1-11, 11:48 AM | #4 |
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Admin
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1/2 of all people develop some form of cancer within their lifetime?
Maybe we are just better at detecting it or people are more open to talk about it. It really does seem over the last several years the number of people I know getting cancer is frightening.
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| Jun1-11, 12:15 PM | #5 |
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More people seeing doctors for ailments results in more people being diagnosed Also, people live longer so cancers that didn't have a chance to be caught are found now. And when you read history, think of the high death rate for children and young adults. You hear things, like "they were always a sickly child", terms like "frail health", or they suddenly became sickly and didn't respond to treatment. Now some cancers aren't discovered until the post mortem, back in the old days, it was illegal to do autopsies. |
| Jun1-11, 10:31 PM | #6 |
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100 years ago, about 1 in 50 people (2%) developed cancer. And someone under 30 years old developing cancer was almost unheard of. I'm assuming that it's because of all the carcinogenic chemicals which exist in the food chain. Pollution and increased ambient radiation from cell phones, radio towers, and other electronic devices might also have something to do with it.
Way back when food was grown and produced naturally, and wasn't sprayed with pesticides or injected with chemicals to increase it's shelf life, cancer was fairly uncommon. But today, it is absolutely everywhere, and it is getting worse! Even toddlers and infant children are getting it! Perhaps there has been some kind of mutation in the human gene pool? |
| Jun1-11, 11:10 PM | #7 |
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The life expectancy for people 100 years ago was 50 years old. How many people do you know under 50 who have had cancer? I can't name a SINGLE person. Bring that to today where the life expectancy is reaching 80 years old and I can probably name a dozen people who have had it or died from it. Also, did they have MRIs in the 1910s? CT scans? How many types of cancer did they even know of back in the 1910s? How many diseases have we cured within the past 100 years that would be responsible for killing people long before they even had a chance to develop cancers? Remember, cancer isn't something that just randomly happens no matter what your age. As you get older, the chances of getting cancer increase. A kid dying of cancer is extraordinarily rare. |
| Jun2-11, 03:19 AM | #8 |
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I believe that the main reason why cancer has never been cured is because there is simply too much money involved in treating it and selling cancer drugs. The medical and especially the pharmaceutical industry make hundreds of billions/trillions of dollars in yearly profits from treating cancer. If cancer was cured, the stock value, and profits of the giant pharmaceutical corporations would take a crashing nosedive. Oncologists would lose their careers, cancer foundations would cease to exist, medical research organizations would lose funding and government grants, and so forth. If the above paragraph violates the forum rules or offends any of the moderators, just delete it and please don't issue me infraction points. I'm just giving an honest hypothesis. This forum is very useful to me and I don't want to be banned. |
| Jun2-11, 06:32 AM | #9 |
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Cancer rates increase because our ability to detect it gets better. In the earlier 1900's, people would get ill and die of unknown causes - there was no way of knowing it was cancer. Cut the crap and conspiracy. Face reality. |
| Jun2-11, 07:17 AM | #10 |
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There is no one magic cure for cancer because cancer cells are human cells. There will be no one drug that somehow targets/destroys cancer cells without damaging non cancerous cells. That's why treatments using better detection and targeting systems hope to improve cancer survival rates. One day getting cancer may be a minor inconvenience that involves nothing more than taking one treatment (with customised delivery/release systems based on your cancer genotype) with little side or no effects but that will be thanks to the combined efforts of hundreds of thousands of scientists world wide working in both the public and private sectors. To suggest that better cancer treatments are not being perused is grossly ignorant and hugely insulting to anyone working in the field. |
| Jun2-11, 09:05 AM | #11 |
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a] having a view that is not light and sunny can be categorically labelled a conpiracy and then judged as such b] crime and corruption is categorically a banned topic c] someone could be infracted without a specific rule being broken. I do know however, that people can be banned for abusive and accusative behaviour toward other members. You may disagree, even strongly, but if you want the rules behind you, you should quote them. |
| Jun2-11, 09:15 AM | #12 |
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The aforementioned opinion in combination to the link to a conspiracy theory website should be all we need to know to label, judge and respond to this as a conspiracy. |
| Jun2-11, 09:17 AM | #13 |
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Regardless, I believe the mentors have discretion on their part. The rules do say conspiracies aren't allowed, so it's that for a start. Anyhow, as I said, report it if you don't like it. |
| Jun2-11, 12:12 PM | #14 |
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Moderator Note -- There has been some cleanup of this thread. Please avoid the conspiracy theory angle, and please keep the bickering out of the discussion. Thank you.
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| Jun2-11, 01:05 PM | #15 |
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Tuberculosis on the other hand though predominantly seen in developing countries has emerged in developed countries IN the setting of AIDS as drug resistant TB. http://www.cdc.gov/tb/publications/f...s/TBTrends.htm |
| Jun2-11, 01:27 PM | #16 |
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http://childrenscancer.org/learning-...cer/index.html http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/f...ypes/childhood Ryan Leaf (35) is recovering from surgery to remove a brain tumor http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shu...ry-to-remove-a My youngest brother died at 34 from leukemia, my dad (in his late 70s) had colon cancer, but survived difficulty. Another person close to me had breast cancer, and one oncologist indicated that the frequency of breast cancer seems to have increased from 1/20 to about 1/8 in the past 4 decades, but perhaps the detection was not as good 40 years ago. Childhood obesity has been on the increase, and that population is likely to see a higher rates of some cancers. http://www.cdc.gov/HealthyYouth/obesity/ http://www.cdc.gov/obesity/data/trends.html |
| Jun2-11, 02:44 PM | #17 |
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