Cancer Survival Rates Up in U.S.

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2005-1-25

25 Jan 2005, 23:06 UTC

I'm Phoebe Zimmerman with the VOA Special English Health Report.

The American Cancer Society says the United States is making
progress against several of its deadliest and most common cancers.

The group says death rates from colon, breast and prostate cancer
continue to decrease. This is also true for lung cancer in men. Lung
cancer is still the leading cause of cancer death, but fewer
Americans smoke these days.

In women, the death rate from lung cancer has stayed about the
same for the first time. This is good news after years of increase.

Almost one-fourth of all deaths in the United States are from
cancer. Cancer is the second leading cause of death after heart
disease. Death rates for both diseases are falling. But researchers
say the rate for heart disease is falling faster. As a result, an
American Cancer Society report shows that cancer now kills more
Americans under the age of eighty-five than any other cause.

Some cancers can be prevented or treated, especially if found
early. Cancer is the name for a group of diseases. All involve the
uncontrolled growth and spread of cells that are not normal. Cell
growth and division are controlled by genes. Some cancers are linked
to family genetics. Pollution and chemicals can also raise a
person's risk of cancer.

The report shows that in recent years, cancer rates in the United
States have dropped about one percent per year. Lung, colon, breast
and prostate cancer make up more than half of all the cases. For
men, prostate cancer is the most common. For women, it is breast
cancer. Rates of both have continued to increase, but more slowly
than in the past.

Smoking causes about one-third of all cancer deaths. Poor diet
and a lack of exercise are blamed for another third in the United
States.

The American Cancer Society says cancer deaths worldwide could
increase nearly one hundred percent in the next twenty years. Yet
most could be avoided. The report calls tobacco use "the number one
cause of cancer and the number one cause of preventable death
throughout the world."

Hepatitis and other infections will cause an estimated seventeen
percent of new cancers worldwide this year. Such cancers are
especially common in developing countries, and many of these cases
can also be prevented.

This VOA Special English Health Report was written by Cynthia
Kirk. I'm Phoebe Zimmerman.


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