I was watching an Indian author (The Emperor of All Maladies?) on Colbert talking about how younger Indians who left for the 'west' are getting cancer at higher rates. He attributed this to changes in diet, they head west and start eating like westerners and less like folks in the old country where spices are used liberally. On top of this I've heard cancers seem to have a geographic link - the closer you are to the equator, less cancer... Of course this poses a problem, people closer to the equator typically have darker skin for protection from the sun. What happens when they head away from the equator? We know fair skinned people moving closer to the equator get skin cancer more often because they lack that protection, but will darker skinned people at higher latitudes get more cancer because they have too much protection from a "weaker" sun? And while skin cancer would increase for lighter people moving to the equator, do they also see a reduction in other forms of cancer?
I'm old enough to watch the obit pages and many of the people dying between 50-70 had cancer and I'm getting the impression cancer sets in early, not that we get cancer young, but whatever triggers it later on in life has its own trigger earlier. Old people living into their late 80s or more seem to have gotten past that time frame, maybe they avoided much of the environmental pollution the baby boomers grew up with, but a bunch of people, primarily men, got their first deadly exposure working in industry from WW2 on. I had a relative die from inhaling the crap they used in shipbuilding during the war, he'd be around 94 today and probably be alive given the longevity in his lineage.
I'm old enough to watch the obit pages and many of the people dying between 50-70 had cancer and I'm getting the impression cancer sets in early, not that we get cancer young, but whatever triggers it later on in life has its own trigger earlier. Old people living into their late 80s or more seem to have gotten past that time frame, maybe they avoided much of the environmental pollution the baby boomers grew up with, but a bunch of people, primarily men, got their first deadly exposure working in industry from WW2 on. I had a relative die from inhaling the crap they used in shipbuilding during the war, he'd be around 94 today and probably be alive given the longevity in his lineage.
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