More and more people have cancer these days. It is almost like the plague that no one wants to talk about, and it keeps getting worse. • In the early 1900s, one in 20 developed cancer. • In the 1940s, one in 16 developed cancer. • In the 1970s, it was one in 10. • Today, it is one in three! Conventional medicine is no where close to finding a cancer cure. Cancer, in fact, is huge business for the pharmaceutical companies. It is a US $125 billion industry! The typical cancer patient spends $50,000 fighting the disease. Chemotherapy drugs are among the most expensive of all treatments, many ranging from $3,000-7,000 for a one-month supply. The cancer industry spends virtually nothing of its multi-billion dollar resources on prevention strategies, such as dietary advice, exercise, and obesity education. Instead, it pours its money into treating cancer - chemotherapy drugs, radiotherapy, surgeries, and diagnostic technologies. Why? Many people believe if the drug companies find a cure, the patient base goes away. It is much more profitable to keep a steady stream of cancer patients alive, but sick, so that they will keep going back for more drugs. Is this not the same formula for many other modern chronic diseases, such as diabetes? Do not ever believe that if you get cancer, it is merely the draw of bad luck or it is inevitable. The most common cause of cancer, in 90-95% of all cases, is acquired mutations, which are directly caused by dietary and lifestyle factors. Even if
The building of bricks (frustration of health care system stacked up) eventually couldn’t keep it together anymore and came crashing to the ground which is the pinnacle of her anger where she wrote this informative article. One of the key concepts she stressed was about the post-truth over what causes cancer. Recently, people have been told that things such as using your phone, eating meats such as chicken, and drinking anything that is hot like coffee can increase your chance for developing cancer. This statement uses the pathos strategy as it tugs at the reader and scares them into thinking their everyday tasks could make them develop this horrible disease. Personally, I feel that this can not be true as ninety plus percentage of the American population uses a phone in their everyday life, where in reality cancer only impacts a small majority.
Part A: Background on Gawande and his research In 1999, Atul Gawande published a paper on the “Cancer-Cluster Myth”, which he described at the beginning of the page as, “When a dozen people in a neighborhood develop tumors, it can’t be a coincidence. Or can it?” In other words, Gawande roughly defined the “Cancer-Cluster Myth” as a conglomeration of diseases concentrated in one area of living having to have some sort of connection. Gawande was a surgeon, writer, and public health researcher who practices general and endocrine surgery at Brigham and Women’s hospital (Atul Gawande, “Bio” 2014).
Which still leaves an un-answered question, but still a fight. Cancer is a Very serious matter and a nationwide outreach. Known as Breast cancer month but it’s also Cancer awareness month. So one day all the praying, questions, and donation will pay off and cancer will be no
Jeffrey Kluger’s discusses in his article “Why Curing Cancer is Not a ‘Moonshot,’” his opinion on how, and why, the cure for cancer can not be compared to a moonshot. Many Presidents, including Barack Obama and Richard Nixon, have preached about the “war on cancer,”. Many have referred to curing cancer as a moonshot. According to Kluger, a moonshot is not nearly as difficult as curing cancer.
A cancer patient spends many hours away from school and work. Cancer is preventable to a certain extent. Cancer, if detected early, saves a person’s life. The Government is denying citizens their right to a happy life, if the Government cuts funding, which means less cancer screenings for their citizens.
The five year survival rate for cancer has remained virtually unchanged for nearly all cancers in the last 30 years. Childhood leukaemia, lymphoma, and testicular cancer has improved. Just those three. Meanwhile, the survival rates for other cancers such as breast, colon, brain, liver, lung, and pancreatic have not improved.
Cancer is found to be one of the most challenging and fastest growing disease in the world. By 2030 it is predicted that about 22 million cases will be diagnosed affecting about 1.7 million American’s every year. These cancer cells when viewed with naked eye resembled like a crab having a mass tissue in the center with legs reaching out. Initially it was determined as the fatal disease having no cure. 4000 years ago an Egyptian physician numbered all the diseases and the treatments which will be known to the ancient world but under the treatment section for cancer it just described “THERE IS NONE”.
You want to feel insignificant? Be an advocate for your own life and your own health and attempt to fight insurance companies and try to impress upon them the importance of your life and your quality of life. Every one of the paid puppets will feed you the same line over and over. Quality of life is not the insurance companies concern. Their concern is the premium you pay, if you pay it on time and that you stay sick enough that you have to stay insured.
“Well, what do you think?” It was the fall of my sophomore year, and I was straining to hear my friend describe a new club that she had heard about on the announcements as students whizzed past us in the hallway. She said that it was called Mini-THON, a smaller version of Penn State’s THON, which is a weekend where students dance non-stop to raise money for pediatric cancer research. I hadn’t heard of THON before, but I was incredibly moved by the cause and asked her to text me any more information that she heard about it before we said our goodbyes and sprinted off to class.
The median survival rate is three years and the cost of care is high. Although it cannot be determine the exact reason for the increase, we know there are a number of risk factors that may attribute to the growth. Risk factors include changes in the demographics of the population, differences in disease burden among individuals/groups, prevalence of co-morbidities, medications, medical interventions and the under-recognition of earlier stages of the disease. Despite resources and improvements in technology, the patients continue to experience a reduced quality of life and significant morbidity and mortality. How can we predict what will happen or determine what we can do to improve the prevalence of this chronic disease (Obrador & Brian, 2015).
If that is what they the individual want why can’t they have it? Next to heart disease cancer is the number one deadliest illness in America and according to Cancer.org causes 589,430 deaths per year in America. Cancer is an illness defined as the abnormal growth and development of cells in the body and is very painful for most having any form of it either in the actual disease or the treatment. The medication prescribed to these individuals and the care they require can cost
Ranking your Health Status It is easier to modify and elevate status so that we can give them the importance in our lives that they deserve if we continue analyzing our values and priorities. It will be important to you if you get to answer the following questions on a personal level without tapping on a computer for answers online. 1. What is the level of importance to be able to go through life in a feel-good slim trim body?
158,080 people died from lung cancer every year. 41,780 people died from pancreatic cancer every year. 26,120 people died from prostate cancer. 1,980 people died from thyroid cancer this year. This year 564,800 people are expected to die of cancer, and more than 1,500 people die of cancer each day.
Kimberly Wiese The film clearly ties into what I have learned in this class on nonprofit management. The main message of the film is that breast cancer has become the poster child for cause marketing. As stated in the book, cause-related marketing represents the most common CSR initiative and probably the most lucrative. (Vaughan, Shannon K.; Arsneault, Shelly (2013-01-09).
Chemotherapy can work wonders on people with cancer. Even though Chemotherapy has been through many struggles it has showed superior strength in fighting cancer. Even with competition, the medicine has outshone the odds of curing cancer. With many pros and cons of the medicine it has helped science and technology in many ways. Will Chemotherapy keep working its wondrous medicine for decades to come or will an alternative take over?