Incidence of bowel cancer is up to three times higher among Australians born in the 1990s compared with the 1950s cohort
An early release of findings from an Australian study published in medRxiv this week showed the incidence of bowel cancer is up to three times higher among Australians born in the 1990s compared with the 1950s cohort.
Bowel cancer is now the leading cause of death in people aged 25 to 44 in Australia.
Bowel cancer is now the leading cause of death in people aged 25 to 44 in Australia.
This is surprising. It wasn't even in the top 5 a couple of years ago, according to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (gov).
[edit: another article the day after says it's "the deadliest cancer for Australians aged 25 to 44", which I suspect may have been mistakenly transformed into "leading cause of death"]
Thanks, I was finding it pretty astounding as well, so it'd make sense if it was the misinterpretation you've described. Maybe send the Guardian a message noting it so they can check?
Was just thinking… you know how like some ludicrous % of insect species have died out, maybe it’s bacteria as well. So maybe our gut biomes are deficient in strains that used to be abundant. 🧐
there's a documentary on netflix about this called "Hack Your Health: The Secret of Your Gut" and it really opened my eyes to this subject! eat your whole vegetables people!
Obesity is a major predictor of colorectal cancer, which has become more common since the 1990s. Physical exercise and fibre intake may also be independently associated with lower rates of colorectal cancer as well.
Microplastics, sugar, corn syrup, aspartame, taurine (and who knows wtf else in those energy drinks), caffeine, high cholesterol fats and overprocessed foods, lack of exercise... I wonder if there's any correlation with incidences of auto-immune diseases 🤔