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Early Detection
Early Detection: Catching Cancer When It's Curable | Bruce Ratner, Adam Bonislawski
21 posts | 1 read
In an accessible yet fastidiously researched intervention Early Detection sets out the urgent necessity of fundamentally re-directing the US's approach to cancer treatment if President Biden's recently announced prioritization of the issue is to be successful. Catching cancer early remains the single best approach to fighting this deadly disease, the second-leading killer both in the US and worldwide. Yet, the health system often fails to do so, even when the necessary tools are available. Early Detection looks at shortcomings in cancer screening efforts and how early detection procedures can be expanded and improved.. Early Detection explores cancer screening systematically and scientifically, examining the subject from the level of individual tests all the way up to the roles and incentives of large healthcare systems and the federal government. It looks not only at the scientific challenges involved but also the social and organizational challenges, an angle that has been traditionally under-covered but is especially relevant in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. The book also highlights the disparities of race and economic class that affect access to early screening. This problem exists throughout the medical system overall but, when it comes to early detection, the problem becomes especially far-reaching from both an ethical and an economic point of view. In teaming together, Bruce Ratner and Adam Bonislawski combine the passions of someone touched deeply by the experience of cancer and the cool analysis of an expert in medical policy and science. They tackle the subject with a combination of breadth and granularity, exploring why early detection has not been given the level of priority it deserves, and the ways it can dramatically reduce cancer deaths in this country.
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keithmalek
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keithmalek
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Fortunately, there has been a lot of funding from the private sector as well.

Suet624 and now funding is gone. 7d
keithmalek @Suet624 Ever since Human Garbage got reelected, I have paid NO attention to the news, so I didn't know that. However, I could've predicted that that would happen, which is yet another reason why I don't need to pay attention. Everything he does is completely predictable. 4d
keithmalek @Suet624 By the way, I'm not just tuning out because of him. I'm done with politics. Americans are too stupid for me to engage. I'm going to make one exception though, by reading Jake Tapper's new book about Biden‘s mental decline. It sounds disturbing, but fascinating. 4d
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Suet624 Everyone needs to deal with this shitshow in their own way. So I understand. I engage because I‘m scared for my kids and grandkids and the country but I truly wish I could go the route you‘re taking. 4d
keithmalek @Suet624 I don't engage because, whether I do or I don't, I can't change anything. I can vote, and my vote counts the same as the 13% of Americans who think that Judge Judy serves on the Supreme Court. So even that doesn't matter. 4d
Suet624 🥴😭 4d
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Suet624 Sigh. 7d
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keithmalek
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"Early detection of lung cancer has languished. In the U.S., still only about 4.5 percent of the eligible population is being screened. Outside the U.S., the number is even lower."

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keithmalek
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keithmalek
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Pickpick

I can't recommend enough this highly important book. One minor criticism I have of it is that it can sometimes be a little vague. For example, the authors mention that there's a blood test that can detect 50 different types of cancers, and yet, they don't say what the name of the test is. Then again, that's what doctors are for.
#2025Book18

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Lack of funding is a constant challenge. Several years ago, researchers from Washington University in St. Louis surveyed state and local departments to learn how many of them had been forced to terminate effective cancer screening and prevention programs due to lack of funding or other factors. The answer? A depressing 28 percent.

Suet624 Hard to ‘like‘ this post. 1w
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keithmalek
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