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Why are cancer cases soaring in India?

- MURALI KRISHNAN

Praful Reddy, 49, an IT profession­al from Andhra Pradesh, has lung cancer and has been undergoing treatment, including targeted therapy, chemothera­py and radiation, to stop its spread since he was diagnosed two years ago. Vomiting, headaches and ulcers are a few of the recurring side effects that he faces and he doesn’t know whether he will get better, although doctors are holding out hope for his recovery. “The doctors have been administer­ing drugs to block the growth and spread of cancer cells. If it does not improve, I might have to undergo a lobectomy to remove the entire lobe of one lung,” Reddy told DW. In Bengaluru, 12-year-old Dipti is receiving treatment for Wilms tumour, a rare type of cancer that originates in the kidneys and mainly affects children.

“She is undergoing radiation therapy for now, but it has caused side effects such as skin damage and hair loss,” her doctor, Charu Sharma, told DW. These aren’t isolated cases and an increasing number of people, especially children, in India are being diagnosed with cancer, marking the fastest rise in cases worldwide. A report released by Apollo Hospitals last month labelled the South Asian nation as “the cancer capital of the world.” The study revealed an alarming picture of declining overall health across India, pointing to soaring cases of cancer and other non-communicab­le diseases. It found that at present, one in three Indians is pre-diabetic, two in three are pre-hypertensi­ve and one in 10 struggles with depression. Chronic conditions like cancer, diabetes, hypertensi­on, cardiovasc­ular diseases and mental health disorders are now so prevalent that they have reached “critical levels,” it added.

The study projected the number of annual cancer cases would rise to 1.57 million by 2025, from almost 1.4 million in 2020. Breast, cervical and ovarian cancer are the most common forms affecting women, while cancer of the lung, the mouth and the prostate are those most affecting men.

“Cancer cases and deaths are rising and are expected to rise further over the next two decades,” said K. Srinath Reddy, the former president of the Public Health Foundation of India. “Contributo­ry factors to rising incidence are advancing age, unhealthy diets with ultra-processed foods stoking inflammati­on, exposure to air pollution laden with carcinogen­s and climate change with increased exposure to ultraviole­t radiation,” he explained.

The report also detailed how certain cancers were affecting people in India at an earlier age than in certain other countries. The median age for lung cancer is 59 in India, but 68 in China, 70 in the United States and 75 in the UK. Around a million new cases of cancer are detected in India every year, 4% of which are in children. Doctors and other health profession­als have deplored the shortage of paediatric oncology facilities.

“Most private hospitals have trained paediatric oncologist­s, but this may not be the case in medical colleges or government hospitals,” said Ruchira Misra, paediatric oncologist and senior consultant at Mumbai’s MRR Children’s Hospital.

“Only 41% of public hospitals have dedicated paediatric oncology department­s,” she added. A lack of funds and access to care, as well as social stigma, were big hurdles for many affected families, she continued. “Diagnosis, access to care and medication­s and follow-up are difficult and there is a lot of abandonmen­t of treatment as the parents cannot afford treatment,” she said. Experts say low health screening rates in the country pose a significan­t challenge for the fight against cancer, and stress the importance of preventive health care measures.

This article was provided by Deutsche Welle

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