يحاول ذهب - حر
More young adults are getting cancer.Researchers are racing to understand why
February 24, 2025
|Time
Dr. Frank Frizelle has operated on countless patients in his career as a colorectal surgeon. But there’s one case that stayed with him.
In 2014, he was treating a woman in her late 20s suffering from bowel cancer-already a rare situation, given her age. But it became even more unusual when her best friend visited her in the hospital and told Frizelle that she had many of the same symptoms as his patient. Subsequent testing revealed that his patient's friend had a lesion that, had it not been caught early, likely would have become cancerous. "That really brought it home to me-how it's much more common than you think," says Frizelle, a professor of surgery at the University of Otago in New Zealand.
Still, like any good scientist, Frizelle was skeptical. Was it simply a fluke that he kept treating strikingly young patients? Or was his practice one tiny data point in a larger trend? He found his answer after sifting through national health data: colorectal cancer, he discovered, was indeed being diagnosed more often than in previous years among New Zealanders under 50.
Further research by Frizelle analyzing populations in Sweden and Scotland showed the same thing.
A bigger picture was emerging. Here were three different countries, with different populations and health challenges-but united by a spike in colorectal cancers among young adults.
هذه القصة من طبعة February 24, 2025 من Time.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Time
Time
CO2 Leadership Report
IN SOME WAYS, THE ANNUAL summit of the Sustainable Markets Initiative was notable merely for continuing on.
2 mins
April 06, 2026
Time
The Most Disruptive Company in The World
ANTHROPIC WAS POISED TO TRANSFORM THE FUTURE OF WORK. NOW IT'S IN A FIGHT OVER THE FUTURE OF WAR
22 mins
April 06, 2026
Time
A soul-deep friendship, lost in a shallow murder mystery
A COMPETITION TO DETERMINE TV’S MOST generic domestic thriller would have dozens of compelling entrants, but if I had to pick a winner, it would be Imperfect Women.
2 mins
April 06, 2026
Time
How do you respond to parents who think football is too dangerous for their kids?
I wouldn't blame them. But I will also say that fear is a choice. There are a lot of great things that you learn through sports. I wouldn't allow the fear of something negative happening stop me from achieving all of the character-building and life lessons that come with sports.
3 mins
April 06, 2026
Time
Zelensky's drone diplomacy
It was just over a year ago that President Donald Trump told Volodymyr Zelensky that he didn’t “have the cards right now.”
2 mins
April 06, 2026
Time
THE SCIENCE OF SKEPTICISM
Scientists once thought illness was caused by “miasmas,” foul vapors that drifted through the air.
3 mins
April 06, 2026
Time
FINDING THE HEARTBEAT
Michelle Pfeiffer is the emotional core of two layered and wildly different new TV shows
6 mins
April 06, 2026
Time
Housing bill
By an overwhelming bipartisan vote of 89-10, the Senate passed a sweeping piece of legislation on March 12 that seeks to bolster the U.S. housing supply and lower costs for homebuyers.
1 min
April 06, 2026
Time
Health Matters
THERE ARE MORE THAN 170 RHINO-viruses known to science.
3 mins
April 06, 2026
Time
A reality-TV spoof that's a reality check
THE QUESTION SCREAMS OUT FROM THE COVER OF Entertainment
8 mins
April 06, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
