Prøve GULL - Gratis
Who's Getting Colon Cancer
Reader's Digest India
|July 2024
With rates rising among younger people, testing should start sooner
Jana Boyer was 54 in June 2021 when she and her husband travelled to Mexico to renew their wedding vows. As they were getting ready to fly home, she started experiencing stomach problems. She called her doctor, who recommended she get checked out by a gastroenterologist to see if she’d picked up a parasite from contaminated food or water.
“My sister-in-law is a retired colorectal nurse, and she’d been bugging me to get a colonoscopy since I’d turned 50,” Boyer says. “I’d kept putting it off, but I figured I might as well kill two birds with one stone.”
That colonoscopy probably saved her life. The procedure detected a mass measuring 3 centimeters in her large intestine. Further tests determined that the mass was malignant, and she immediately had surgery, followed by six months of chemotherapy. Until her trip to Mexico, Boyer hadn’t experienced any symptoms that might have been signs of colon cancer.
“Most colorectal cancers cause no symptoms in the early stage, when they are most treatable,” explains Folasade May, a gastroenterologist and an associate professor of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. “This is why starting at age 45, everyone needs to get screened for colorectal cancer, regardless of whether you have symptoms or not.” Those symptoms, when they do occur, include rectal bleeding, blood in the stool, constipation and other sudden bowel changes.
Denne historien er fra July 2024-utgaven av Reader's Digest India.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Reader's Digest India
Reader's Digest India
EXTRAORDINARY INDIANS
Six ordinary people who turned concern into action, fixed what was broken—and made life fairer, safer, and kinder for all
16 mins
February 2026
Reader's Digest India
STUDIO
Untitled (Native Man from Chotanagpur drawing Bow and Arrow)
1 min
February 2026
Reader's Digest India
Learning to FLY
A small act of rebellion on a cold Oxford night creates a moment of spontaneous joy
4 mins
February 2026
Reader's Digest India
MY (RELUCTANT) TRIP TO THE TITANIC
In 2023, the submersible Titan imploded on its way to view the famous sunken ocean liner. A year earlier, our author—a sitcom writer— took the same trip. Here's what he saw
9 mins
February 2026
Reader's Digest India
She Carried HOME the Blues
Tipriti Kharbangar has spent two decades carrying a music that refuses spectacle and chases truth. Now the blues singer is asking a deeper question: what does it mean to know your roots—and protect them?
9 mins
February 2026
Reader's Digest India
A Year in France
My time in Aix-en-Provence as a student changed my outlook on life
3 mins
February 2026
Reader's Digest India
A SISTERHOOD IN THE WILD
COMMUNITY In a city better known for traffic snarls than bird calls, a small but growing initiative is helping women slow down and look closer at the wild spaces around them.
3 mins
February 2026
Reader's Digest India
How Famine and History Rewired Our Genes
What if India's current diabetes crisis began generations ago? Science reveals that food scarcity, colonial history, and epigenetics quietly shaped South Asia's metabolic fate
4 mins
February 2026
Reader's Digest India
Tracing the Birth of Nations
In his latest book, Sam Dalrymple interlaces high political history with intimate human stories to examine the complex, often violent, foundations of modern west and south Asian countries
4 mins
February 2026
Reader's Digest India
The Case for Curiosity
Two trivia enthusiasts explore how wonder fades with age— and why asking questions might be the key to finding it again
3 mins
February 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
