Cancer and You In the time it takes you to read this short page of information, another five people were diagnosed with cancer and two more people will have died from cancer. Cancer kills about one American every minute of every day, or about 1,500 people every 24 hours. According to the National Institutes of Health, overall costs for cancer in 2007 were nearly $219.2 billion, including medical costs, the cost of lost productivity due to illness and the cost of lost productivity due to premature death.
The Good News Cancer researchers have a clear understanding of how cancer evolves, from the initial disruption of genetic material, and the signals that drive and nourish this growth and cause it to spread. We are at a crossroads in the history of cancer research and we are poised to make exponential gains, to even reduce it to a chronic disease, like diabetes. Early indicators include: For the first time in more than 70 years, annual cancer deaths in the United States have fallen. The number of cancer deaths in the U.S. fell between 2002 and 2003, the first annual decrease in total cancer deaths since the 1930s, when nationwide data began to be compiled.
As of January 2004, it is estimated that there are 10.8 million cancer survivors in the U.S. Approximately 14 percent of the 10.1 million estimated survivors were diagnosed more than 20 years ago.
People can reduce their risk of getting cancer through diet, exercise, weight loss and the practice of other healthy lifestyle factors.
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