Health Desk- 4th Feb,
2020: The UN health agency on Tuesday warned cancer cases would rise by 81
per cent in low- and middle-income countries by 2040 because of a lack of
investment in prevention and care.
The Geneva-based World Health Organization (WHO) said in a
report that these countries had focused their limited resources on combating
infectious diseases and improving maternal and child health instead of fighting
cancer.
It said they often had the highest cancer mortality too.
"This is a wake-up call to all of us to tackle the unacceptable
inequalities between cancer services in rich and poor countries," Ren
Minghui, a WHO Assistant Director General, said in the report.
The report, timed to coincide with World Cancer Day, said an
investment of $25 billion (23 billion euros) over the next decade could save
seven million lives from cancer.
"Controlling cancer does not have to be
expensive," Andre Ilbawi, of the WHO's department for management of
non-communicable diseases, told journalists.
The annual report found that overall cancer cases in the
world would rise by 60 percent by 2040 and said tobacco use was responsible for
25 per cent of cancer deaths.
Elisabete Weiderpass, director of the International Agency
for Research on Cancer, which works with the WHO, said better cancer treatment
in high-income countries had resulted in a 20-per cent drop in mortality
between 2000 and 2015.
But in poorer countries, the reduction was just five per
cent.
"We need to see everyone benefiting equally," she
said.
While cancer had long been considered a disease of wealthy
countries, this was no longer the case, the report said. It pointed out that
one in five people worldwide would face a cancer diagnosis in their lifetime.
http://amarhealth.com/Spot-Light/4699/WHOforecasts81pccancerjumpinpoorercountries
http://amarhealth.com/Spot-Light/4699/WHOforecasts81pccancerjumpinpoorercountries
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