Malta Independent

It’s October, so think pink

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It’s October, which means people and places everywhere are ‘going pink’ for Breast Cancer Awareness Month. It is also time for one of this newspaper’s two annual calls for prevention that saves lives.

Every year, during the festive season we launch an appeal to not drink and drive, a way to easily prevent the unnecessar­y loss of life.

And each October we launch our pink appeal because, beyond the tragedy of breast cancer and the lives it affects and takes every year, there is hope: breast cancer is detectable and treatable.

Especially during the month of October, pink expresses support for women undergoing treatment for breast cancer, recognises those who survived their battle with the disease, honours those who died and reminds everyone that steps can be taken and more must be done to keep breast cancer from striking in the first place.

The victims of breast cancer need support, and not just from loved ones, friends, healthcare profession­als and researcher­s. They need support from you, and that is the underlying purpose of Pink October.

It is a sad fact that there are very few of us fortunate enough to have not been directly or indirectly touched by the insidious killer that is cancer at some point in our lives. And it is an ominous fact indeed that Malta registers some of the EU’s highest incidence rates for breast cancer. The good news is that the absolute number of newly registered cases of breast cancer per year is decreasing every year.

The problem as far as Malta is concerned mainly boils down to the country’s ageing population, a general lack of physical activity and obesity. That Malta’s population is rapidly ageing is a simple fact, but we can certainly do a great deal to address the country’s seemingly chronic problems with weight, lack of exercise – particular­ly as evidenced and amply documented in the younger generation – and the unhealthy, ironically non-Mediterran­ean diet that prevails in most households.

Malta is still in time to address the frightenin­g prospect of an anticipate­d surge in new cancer cases in the coming 15 years, but if we are to do so, on a national and personal level, we must begin to redouble our efforts now. Scientists estimate that about a third of the most common cancers can be prevented simply by maintainin­g a healthy weight, being more physically active and eating healthier.

More than 25 per cent of all deaths in Malta are directly attributab­le to cancer, and close to 10 per cent of all cancer-related deaths are from breast cancer.

Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women. It is the main cause of death in women aged 40 to 59 and about one in 10 women can be expected to develop breast cancer in the course of their lives. Risk factors such as age, the age at which a woman delivers their first child, family history and menopause account for nearly 50 per cent of the risk, with environmen­tal factors also playing an important part.

When it comes to the scourge of breast cancer, awareness is of paramount importance since prevention and early detection are, as with all cancers, the best defence.

And when you consider the risk factors for breast cancer – and there are many, sadly – there is a key element over which women do have agency: early detection. And raising that awareness is what the month of October, Pink October, is all about.

We encourage everyone to get involved in at least one of these activities and to lend your support to the fight against breast cancer.

It does not, and should not, stop there. During Pink October, people wear pink ribbons to honour survivors, to remember those lost to the disease, and to support the progress being made to defeat breast cancer.

We encourage readers to wear a pink ribbon lapel pin, which has become an internatio­nal symbol to increase awareness about breast cancer. If one is not readily available, simple instructio­ns for making one from a piece of pink ribbon can be easily found online – a small and inexpensiv­e gesture that speaks volumes.

This year, as in every recent year, newspaper is sporting a pink ribbon on our front page and portal this month; we strongly encourage all readers to show their support in a similar fashion and join in the fight against breast cancer.

That is because of the simple fact that every life lost to breast cancer is one life too many.

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