In Batman Shooting, Police Slipped On Blood, Found Passive Suspect

  • Aquino, Trillanes, Pimentel named Senators-elect

    Aquino, Trillanes, Pimentel named Senators-elect

    Yahoo! Southeast Asia Newsroom
    Aquino, Trillanes, Pimentel named Senators-elect

    Amid questions hurled against its early partial proclamation, the poll body on Friday named three more winning Senate candidates even before it completed its official count.

  • UNA to Brillantes: Don't quit

    UNA to Brillantes: Don't quit

    Yahoo! Southeast Asia Newsroom
    UNA to Brillantes: Don't quit

    The United Nationalist Alliance (UNA) does not want Commission on Elections (Comelec) chair Sixto Brillantes Jr. to quit.

  • Why Pimentel skipped his proclamation

    Why Pimentel skipped his proclamation

    Yahoo! Southeast Asia Newsroom
    Why Pimentel skipped his proclamation

    When the poll body proclaimed Aquilino Martin "Koko" Pimentel senator-elect Friday, he joined seven of his fellow bets in the administration slate.

  • Top 6 senators proclaimed

    Top 6 senators proclaimed

    Top 6 senators proclaimed

    Newly-elected Senators Grace Poe, Loren Legarda, Alan Peter Cayetano, Francis Escudero, Nancy Binay and Sonny Angara, with the Commission of Elections en banc—sitting as National Board of Canvassers, during their proclamation as the top six winning senators, at the NBOC canvassing center, Philippine International Convention Center (PICC), Pasay City, south of Manila, on 16 May 2013, four days after the 2013 midterm elections. (Mike Alquinto/NPPA Images)

  • Dynasties sweep polls in clannish Muslim Mindanao

    Tinig Ng Botante

    By VERA Files In the clannish provinces of Muslim Mindanao, the Ampatuans remain the political family to beat, with close to 20 members of the clan winning various local positions in Manguindanao in last Monday’s election, based on the Commission … Continue reading →

NEW YORK (Reuters) - As the United States (US) enters the fifth decade of its "war on cancer," deaths continue to decline, according to an exhaustive report based on official data released on Monday.

But that doesn't tell the whole story, say experts not involved in the report from the National Cancer Institute, the American Cancer Society and other groups on progress against cancer since the 1970s. The improvements reflect such lifestyle changes as not smoking more than they do the billions of dollars spent to discover and implement advanced cancer treatments.

"We don't look at this as progress," said Fran Visco, president of the National Breast Cancer Coalition, of the new numbers. "This is such incremental improvement, when you look at the decades of investments, the cost of treatments, the number of researchers and journals, and then at the number of people who die ... well, we are clearly doing something wrong," said Visco, who was not involved in the study.

The decrease in deaths from all cancers - 1.8 percent a year for men and 1.5 percent for women from 2005 to 2009, the last year with enough data to analyze - while steady, is disappointing to many experts because it is no greater in the most recent five-year period than in the previous one, and because it has hardly been affected by supposed advances in detection and treatment.

"The decrease in cancer mortality is driven largely by the decrease in cancer incidence, which is mostly because of the decrease in smoking," said Dr. Otis Brawley, chief medical and scientific officer of the American Cancer Society (ACS).

Smoking can cause more than a dozen cancers, including lung, head, neck, bladder and mouth.

Although improvements in treatment for breast and some other cancers have cut death rates, Brawley said, headline-making new drugs have contributed little. "Most of the expensive new drugs prolong survival for no more than three or four months," on average, he said.

Incidence Of Cancer Falls

At first glance, the findings in the report, published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, are worth cheering.

In men, the incidence of cancer fell an average 0.6 percent a year from 2000 to 2009, find the researchers, who include scientists from the NCI, ACS and other federal agencies and private groups. In women, cancer incidence was flat for those years but rose 0.6 percent a year from 2005 to 2009. (The statistics are adjusted to account for the aging of the population, since cancer is largely a disease of the elderly.)

Cancer incidence among women fell when fewer post-menopausal women opted for hormone-replacement therapy following a 2002 report that linked it to breast cancer and other disease, said NCI's Brenda Edwards, the lead author of the report.

But no other factor occurred to cause another dip after the mid-2000s. Instead, although the incidence of breast cancer fell from 2000 to 2009 by an average 0.7 percent a year, it rose 0.9 percent a year from 2005 to 2009.

The trend in childhood cancer is also going in the wrong direction. From 2000 to 2009, cancer incidence among children 19 and younger rose 0.7 percent per year, on average.

Experts are not sure why the numbers are rising. But one reason may be, paradoxically, greater access to health insurance.

An uninsured child who developed flu-like symptoms in the 1990s might have died from what was actually leukemia, but without medical care his death certificate said pneumonia, explained ACS's Brawley. With insurance, that child now is more likely to see a doctor and get correctly diagnosed.

Experts note that cancer incidence can be affected by such changes as how many people are screened for the disease, such as through mammography or prostate-specific antigen (PSA) tests. That may account for the recent increase in cases of thyroid and kidney cancers.

Incidence is therefore less accurate an indicator of progress against the disease than mortality. By this measure, too, progress has been halting at best, the report finds.

Death rates from cancer - the percentage of all deaths due to any form of this disease - have been declining since the early 1990s, by about 1.8 percent per year in men and 1.4 percent per year in women. But the decrease was also 1.8 percent per year from 2005 to 2009 for men, and 1.5 percent for women. So even as expensive new treatments were introduced, progress is not accelerating.

"We're all wondering why there hasn't been an acceleration in the rate of decrease" in mortality, said report co-author Edgar Simard, an epidemiologist at ACS.

One reason is that "cancer cells are wily foes," said Massachusetts Institute of Technology cancer biologist Robert Weinberg. "What is most frustrating is the ability of cancer cells that are under attack and being decimated by one therapy to invent a way of circumventing the therapy and finding a new way to thrive and proliferate."

Although the drop in smoking is responsible much of the decline in cancer death rates - 42 percent of adults smoked in the mid-1960s, compared with about 21 percent now - some of the credit goes to improved screening.

Colorectal screening can find and remove polyps before they become malignant, for instance. "So stage one never gets to stage two or three or four, and you have less mortality," said Dr. Maurie Markman, senior vice president for clinical affairs at Cancer Treatment Centers of America. Deaths from colorectal cancer fell 2.9 percent a year from 2000 to 2009 among men and 1.9 percent among women.

The 1.9 percent annual decline in deaths from breast cancer over the same period probably reflects some improvements in treatment. But "a huge driver of the decrease is what we call breast awareness," said Brawley. "It's not monthly breast exams" that do not decrease deaths "but women being aware of their body and asking, what is this change in my breast?"

The rise in liver cancer may be the result of a high prevalence of chronic hepatitis C infection resulting from drug use decades ago, the report says. Obesity may be raising the incidence of liver, pancreatic and uterine cancers.

"If the American public really wants fewer people to die from cancer, then there will need to be major changes in lifestyle," said MIT's Weinberg, such as declines in tobacco use and obesity. The biggest reductions in cancer mortality "will come from prevention rather than treatment."

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  • Filipino assaulted by 4 Taiwanese in Tainan

    Taipei (The China Post/ANN) - Police confirmed that a Philippine worker was attacked by four Taiwanese and beaten with iron sticks and baseball bats in Tainan City on May 16 following the recent heated dispute between Taiwan and the Philippines.

  • Church must help the poorest, not dissect theology, pope says
    Church must help the poorest, not dissect theology, pope says

    By Philip Pullella VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis shared personal moments with 200,000 people on Saturday, telling them he sometimes nods off while praying at the end of a long day and that it "breaks my heart" that the death of a homeless person is not news. Francis, who has made straight talk and simplicity a hallmark of his papacy, made his unscripted comments in answers to questions by four people at a huge international gathering of Catholic associations in St. Peter's Square. ...

  • Villar, Ejercito, Honasan named last Senators-elect
    Villar, Ejercito, Honasan named last Senators-elect

    The Commission on Elections (Comelec) will proclaim more winners in the senatorial race Saturday night, amid criticisms of "premature" proclamations.

  • Philippine immigration law revision mulled
    Philippine immigration law revision mulled

    Manila, Philippines --- House Speaker Feliciano Belmonte, Jr. said a revision of the seven-decade old Philippine Immigration Act of 1940 or Commonwealth Act No. 613 is now timely and crucial for national security and economic development considerations.

  • Why Honasan feels bittersweet at his proclamation
    Why Honasan feels bittersweet at his proclamation

    For newly-proclaimed Senator Gregorio “Gringo” Honasan, this could be his last six years as senator.

Editor’s note:Yahoo! Philippines encourages responsible comments that add dimension to the discussion. No bashing or hate speech, please. You can express your opinion without slamming others or making derogatory remarks.

Odd Stories

  • Winning ticket for $590.5 million Powerball lottery sold in Florida

    Winning ticket for $590.5 million Powerball lottery sold in Florida

    Reuters - 10 hours ago
    Winning ticket for $590.5 million Powerball lottery sold in Florida

    By Brendan O'Brien (Reuters) - A single winning ticket for a record Powerball lottery jackpot worth $590.5 million was sold in Florida, organizers said late on Saturday, but there was no immediate word about who won one of the largest jackpots in U.S. history. The winning numbers from Saturday night's drawing were: 10, 13, 14, 22 and 52, with a Powerball number of 11. The odds of winning were put at 1 in 175 million. The winning ticket was sold at a Publix supermarket in Zephyrhills, a suburb

  • Germans blame euro zone crisis for Eurovision debacle

    Germans blame euro zone crisis for Eurovision debacle

    Reuters - 12 hours ago
    Germans blame euro zone crisis for Eurovision debacle

    BERLIN (Reuters) - Germans lamented their unexpectedly poor showing at the Eurovision Song Contest, blaming Chancellor Angela Merkel's tough stance in the euro zone crisis for their failure to win any points from 34 of the 39 countries voting. Denmark's Emmelie de Forest won the event, watched by around 125 million people across Europe, with 281 points while German act Cascada was 21st out of 26 countries, getting just 18 points from Austria, Israel, Spain, Albania and Switzerland. ...

  • Powerball jackpot could go higher than $600 million

    Powerball jackpot could go higher than $600 million

    Reuters - Sun, May 19, 2013
    Powerball jackpot could go higher than $600 million

    By Karen Brooks AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - The Powerball jackpot Saturday night could exceed the $600 million figure being advertised, possibly rivaling the largest lottery payoff in U.S. history, a Texas Lottery official said on Saturday. "Oftentimes, the advertised amount is lower than what the actual jackpot ends up being," said Kelly Cripe, a spokeswoman for the Texas Lottery. "It's entirely possible this $600 million jackpot will end up being a bigger jackpot. ...

  • Denmark favorite to win Eurovision Song Contest

    Denmark favorite to win Eurovision Song Contest

    AP - Sat, May 18, 2013
    Denmark favorite to win Eurovision Song Contest

    MALMO, Sweden (AP) — An ethno-inspired flute and drum tune from Denmark is the bookmakers' favorite to win this year's Eurovision Song Contest on Saturday, which also features a bizarre opera pop number from Romania and an Armenian rock song written by the guitarist of Black Sabbath.

  • Canadian astronaut wrestles with gravity after spaceflight

    Canadian astronaut wrestles with gravity after spaceflight

    Reuters - Fri, May 17, 2013
    Canadian astronaut wrestles with gravity after spaceflight

    By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - Back on Earth, Canadian astronaut and cyberspace tweeter Chris Hadfield is getting a rough re-introduction to gravity after a five-month stint aboard the International Space Station, the former commander told reporters during a video webcast from Houston. Hadfield became a social media rock star with his zero-gravity version of David Bowie's "Space Oddity" and a continuous stream of commentary on Twitter about his life in orbit. But living

  • Basketball, brotherhood, and beating a bleeding disease VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Lean Carlo Macoto, VERA Files Like the vast majority of Filipino men, Raymund Nanos is a huge basketball fan. His favorite sport is basketball. His favorite pastime is watching basketball. Those who don’t know him would probably think he … Continue reading →

  • 25 years of feeding a city’s body and soul VERA Files - The Inbox

    Text and photos by Elizabeth Lolarga, VERA Files It is apropos that a café founded by artists, writers and other individuals who operate outside society’s margins should mark its 25th year as a now respected Baguio institution with music, poetry … Continue reading →

  • A festival to celebrate 133rd birthday of Sarung Banggi composer VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Pablo A. Tariman, VERA Files Bicol composer Potenciano Gregorio-- who penned the famous Bicol love song, “Sarung Banggi”-- turns 133 on Saturday (May 18) with a festival carrying the name of his composition. But his famous love song has … Continue reading →

  • Filipino workers paying the price for Malacañang’s bungling Ellen Tordesillas, Contributor - The Inbox

    Commentary By Ellen Tordesillas It took a week for President Aquino to realize that the killing of a Taiwanese fisherman by a member of the Philippine Coast Guard team in the disputed waters of South China Sea could lead to … Continue reading →

  • Hot water treatment produces sweet, juicy mangoes VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Leilanie G. Adriano, VERA Files At the warehouse of farmer Ricardo Tolentino in Laoag, Ilocos Norte are the sweetest and juiciest mangoes, courtesy of a hot water treatment developed at the Mariano Marcos State University (MMSU). The technology was … Continue reading →

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