|
Bad news has a terrible tendency to drown out good news. Given the
number of negative headlines in 2008 -- from the tanking stock market
to the increasing unemployment rate -- you may have ended the year with
a case of "crisis fatigue."
While times are tough, they are most certainly not all bad. In
fact, the last few months of 2008 brought a rash of positive
developments in the fight against cancer. For one, The Annual
Report to the Nation,
which came out just before Thanksgiving, showed that both cancer death
rates and cancer incidence rates have dropped for the first time on
record. Another report indicates fewer Americans are smoking. Still
another found that colorectal cancer rates are falling.
Here are 5 stories -- mostly good news, each and every one --
you may have missed. Here's to hoping 2009 brings more of their kind.
Cancer
Death Rates and Incidence Down, Annual Report Shows
Both
cancer death rates and cancer incidence rates
are dropping, according to The Annual Report to the Nation,
a joint report by the American Cancer Society, the US Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the National Cancer Institute
(NCI), and the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries
(NAACR). This is the first time in the 10-year history of the report
that the cancer incidence rate has dropped.
According to the report, the decline in the cancer incidence
rate was largely due to declines in the rates of the most common
cancers: lung, colorectal, and prostate cancer for men and breast and
colorectal cancer for women. The drop may be a sign that prevention and
early detection efforts are having an impact. However, experts also
caution that it could mean fewer people are getting screened. The
declining cancer death rate, though, is definitely cause for
celebration. Read the full story here.
Smoking
Rate Declines for the First Time in Years
The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found
that fewer Americans are lighting up -- a sign that tobacco control
efforts like taxation and legislation may be working. According to the
CDC, there were 43.4 million current smokers in the U.S. (19.8%) in
2007 -- a one percent decline from the 20.8% in 2006.
Cigarette smoking accounts for at least 30% of all cancer
deaths, and it's a major cause of heart disease, emphysema, and stroke.
Quitting smoking substantially reduces the risk of these diseases, and
the sooner people quit, the better it is for their health.
Read the full story here.
Faster
Disability Claim Process for Some Cancers
A new
initiative by the Social Security Administration (SSA),
called Compassionate Allowances, announced this fall, will help
seriously ill people get their disability benefits sooner. The new
program covers 50 conditions, including 25 cancers, that are so serious
that they obviously meet the standards required for the Social Security
Administration to make a finding that the person is disabled.
The initiative will provide much-needed financial help -- much
more quickly -- to many people with cancer who cannot work because of
their illness, said Daniel E. Smith, president of the American Cancer
Society Cancer Action NetworkSM (ACS CAN), the
non-profit, nonpartisan sister organization of the American Cancer
Society. ACS and ACS CAN worked with Social Security to develop the
program. Read the full story here.
Colorectal
Cancer Testing on the Rise
More people are getting screened for colorectal cancer,
according to a data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC). While the increase is small and isn't seen across all
populations, the report shows encouraging progress in the fight against
a cancer that's largely curable when caught early, and can even be
prevented in some cases.
Another report
found that since 1998, colorectal cancer incidence rates have been
declining rapidly, and survival rates have steadily improved. Between
the mid-1970s and 1996-2004, the 5-year survival rate increased from
51% to 65%, according to the report. There's a caveat, though: the
graphs show a widening survival gap between whites and various minority
groups. Read the full story here.
Cancer
Organizations Team Up for Global Cancer Fight
The end
of the year brought an unprecedented collaboration.
Leaders from the American Cancer Society, Susan G. Komen for the Cure,
and the Lance Armstrong Foundation announced plans to team up with the
International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) and the National
Cancer Institute of Mexico to focus attention on the growing
international cancer problem. The 3 US-based organizations also issued
a 6-point call-to-action outlining steps the incoming US administration
can take to ease the global cancer burden.
"Cancer is a growing pandemic – and an enemy that no single
organization, or nation for that matter, can defeat alone. It will take
collaborative efforts such as this unprecedented gathering here today
and determined action from our nation's leaders if we are to make real
and lasting progress in the worldwide fight against cancer," said John
R. Seffrin, PhD, chief executive officer of the American Cancer
Society.
Read more here.
ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
|