As they enter their 60s, Gen Xers projected to see higher cancer rates than Boomers

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As they enter their 60s, Gen Xers projected to see higher cancer rates than Boomers
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If current cancer trends continue, authors of a new study project “cancer incidence in the US could remain unacceptably high for decades to come.”

As they head into their golden years, Gen-Xers are more likely to be diagnosed with cancer than the generation born before them, the Baby Boomers, a newconcludes, “cancer incidence in the U.S. could remain unacceptably high for decades to come.”, senior investigator in the institute’s biostatistics branch. “It gives you boots-on-the-ground intelligence about what is happening. That's where you go and look for clues about causes.”Rosenberg and his team used data from 3.

For decades, the news about cancer had largely been encouraging. Lung cancer rates were dropping as a result of educational efforts about the harms of tobacco. In women, incidences of cervical cancer, and in men, incidences of liver, gallbladder and non-Hodgkin lymphoma also were dropping.The new study’s models found increases in thyroid, kidney, rectal, colon cancers and leukemia in both men and women.

The increases for Generation X over Baby Boomers appeared in all racial and ethnic groups except Asian or Pacific Islander men, who were less likely to be diagnosed with cancer at age 60 if they were Gen-Xers than Baby Boomers., chief research officer for the Permanente Medical Group and a Kaiser gastroenterologist in San Francisco, sees generational divisions for cancer trends as “somewhat artificial,” he said in an email.

, who was not involved in the research. She said in an email that the U.S. should do more reduce exposure to pollutants like PFAS, or “forever chemicals,” and pesticides.

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