Tomorrow is World Cancer Day. We think we have a cancer
problem in the US ,
and we do. But other countries, especially the poorer ones, are truly
suffering. Two publications by the American Cancer Society - Cancer Atlas and The Global Economic Cost of Cancer (which I quote extensively) -
soberingly detail the scope of the problem.
Similarly, although morphine to treat cancer pain is
plentiful, safe, and easy to use, millions of terminally ill cancer patients in
Africa and Asia die in pain because of regulatory
restrictions, cultural misperceptions about pain, and concerns about addiction.
Eighty-five percent of the global population lives in low- and middle-income
countries, but consumes just 7% of the medicinal opioids, like morphine.
For the first time, research has shown that cancer has the
most devastating economic impact of any disease in the world. The total
economic impact of premature death and disability from cancer worldwide was $895
billion in 2008, nearly 19 percent higher than heart disease. And, that figure
does not include direct medical costs.
Cancers of the lung, bronchus, and trachea account for the
largest drain - nearly $180 billion - on the global economy. That's not
surprising, given that smokers die an average of 15 years earlier than
nonsmokers. Tobacco is predicted to kill seven million people annually by 2020
and eight million per year by 2030, with more than 80 percent of the deaths
taking place in low- to middle-income countries. One-third of those deaths are
the result of cancers. This is almost entirely preventable.
And it isn't just lung cancer. Despite the fact that most
cases of cervical cancer can be prevented or treated effectively, 274,000 women
die from the disease yearly. Approximately 241,000 of these deaths are among
women in low- and middle-income nations. And then there's breast cancer,
colorectal cancer, and on and on.
It seems like all we hear about on the global stage is
HIV/AIDS and malaria (and, more recently, Ebola) - the so-called communicable
diseases. But the economic loss from HIV/AIDS ($193.3 billion) TB (45.4
$billion) and malaria ($24.8 billion) combined is not even 30 percent of the
economic loss of cancer.
Why should you care?
Put simply, the global cancer epidemic is huge and is set to rise, according to World Cancer Day planners. Cancer treatment and pain management for those dying of cancer are not political issues. They are global health issues which we in the
This will require effort on the part of organizations like the American Cancer Society and other NGOs, but it will to an even larger degree depend on the leadership of the