A reality-check on the War on Cancer

By Tony Ulrich

President Nixon declared the war on cancer in the seventies and foresaw victory waiting around the door. Unfortunately, this goal was never achieved. We know that a cure for cancer is yet to be found.

When I asked my parents about how many people they knew with cancer when they were still children, they told me, maybe one or two. I am now 37 years old and I have to conclude that the situation has changed dramatically.

My point is: every 7th or 8th women today in the United States will get breast-cancer this year. Go back in time and you will realize it wasn't like that 20, 40, 60, 80 years ago.

You probably know one or more people diagnosed with cancer. And unfortunately, it is likely that there's even someone in your family who got diagnosed.

In March of 2009 my wife Ann was diagnosed with breast cancer. My mother was diagnosed with cervical cancer only a few months later. And after I encountered blood in my urine, a CT-Scan result came back with another cancer diagnosis for our family. A larger tumor was found in my left kidney.

After three surgeries, the margins finally came back clear for my wife's breast cancer. I just had my left kidney removed two weeks ago. Cancer used to be something remote. But nowadays it's simply everywhere you look.

So there is no way to say it: Cancer is actually growing, even though research and sciences were provided with large amounts of money over the years. And we have to admit, that President Nixon's 'War on Cancer' is far from over. Needless to say, that the situation is the same everywhere in the Western World, it's not just the USA.

Is it only me imagining that all? Is it simply coincidental that both, my wife and I got diagnosed with cancer, plus my mom and another 10 folks I know - all that in just one year?

A lot of people disagree with me. They point out that especially in the area of breast cancer the situation has gotten much better, by referring to new studies and statistical data. According to those voices, we have a lower number of new incidents and mortalities.

Well, I got to admit that math wasn't necessarily my strongest subject back in the days but I do know how to read data and graphs, furthermore, I know how easy it to tweak numbers. Actually, you don't really have to tweak them, it's much rather a matter of how you present them.

'The War on Cancer' is far away from being over soon, even though some significant improvements were achieved by research, science and modern medicine. Hopefully, it won't take too long anymore until we have achieved President Nixon's declared goal, of eradicating cancer entirely. - 30427

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