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New Solut. 2004;14(2):109-24. doi: 10.2190/4ERA-540H-7U7C-PB3V.

Are we winning or losing the war on cancer? Deciphering the propaganda of NCI's 33-year war.

New solutions : a journal of environmental and occupational health policy : NS

Genevieve K Howe, Richard W Clapp

Affiliations

  1. BU School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02118, USA.

PMID: 17208743 DOI: 10.2190/4ERA-540H-7U7C-PB3V

Abstract

The National Cancer Institute (NCI) and collaborating agencies have proclaimed great progress in the U.S. "war on cancer," while at the same time presenting more reasons for concern than celebration. We reviewed various documents and data files and found that incidence and mortality rates for all cancer sites combined remain higher than they were when the "war on cancer" was declared in 1971, despite very recent, modest decreases. The burden of the disease has risen from three million to nearly ten million people. Black Americans, men of all races, and other segments of the population disproportionately bear the burden of cancer. We also looked at data for malignant breast cancer and found that incidence rates increased 36% from 1973 to 2000, while mortality for all population groups combined declined slightly. Breast cancer mortality is 34% higher among black women than among white women, even though white women are generally more likely to get the disease. The $50 billion spent on the "war on cancer" over the last 33 years has yielded few gains. The NCI's resources must be refocused on preventing cancers we know how to prevent.

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