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this post was submitted on 01 Aug 2024
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I’m certain pollutants like microplastics and PFAS are contributing to increased cancer rates, but how much impact comes from better testing and longer lifespans leading to increased diagnosis of cancers that would otherwise be missed?
life expectancy is decreasing in the US.
also, is dying from cancer really something that got frequently interpreted as something else a generation ago? this isn't like neurodivergence. your body filled up with tumors and you stop eating, nobody in the 70s was like, "must have been an accident."
Family thought I was autistic, turns out it was just cancer.
I think the argument is more that longer lifespans allow for cancer to develop, but I don't think you can say a given 80 year old is more likely to die of cancer than a heart attack or car accident so I don't know that it would artificially inflate the cancer numbers anyway
From the abstract it appears to be age-adjusted rates