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Health
WHO Forecasts Global Cancer Cases to Reach 35 Million Annually by 2050
✍️ Nagaland Post
🗓 18 Jul 2026, 08:18 PM
👁 6
The World Health Organization warns that worldwide cancer cases could climb to 35 million per year by 2050, highlighting a looming public‑health crisis.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has issued a stark warning that the global burden of cancer may surge to 35 million new cases annually by the year 2050.
The warning, released in a recent WHO briefing, points to a combination of demographic shifts, lifestyle changes and environmental factors as key drivers of the projected rise. Current estimates place the annual incidence at roughly 18 million, meaning the increase would represent nearly a doubling over the next three decades.
WHO officials emphasised that the surge would strain health systems worldwide, particularly in low‑ and middle‑income countries where screening and treatment infrastructure is limited. They called for intensified prevention efforts, including tobacco control, vaccination against oncogenic viruses, and promotion of healthy diets and physical activity.
The organisation also urged governments to invest in early detection programmes and to strengthen cancer registries to better track trends and allocate resources effectively.
"If we do not act now, the health and economic costs will be catastrophic," a WHO spokesperson said, underscoring the urgency of global cooperation to curb the impending rise.
The warning, released in a recent WHO briefing, points to a combination of demographic shifts, lifestyle changes and environmental factors as key drivers of the projected rise. Current estimates place the annual incidence at roughly 18 million, meaning the increase would represent nearly a doubling over the next three decades.
WHO officials emphasised that the surge would strain health systems worldwide, particularly in low‑ and middle‑income countries where screening and treatment infrastructure is limited. They called for intensified prevention efforts, including tobacco control, vaccination against oncogenic viruses, and promotion of healthy diets and physical activity.
The organisation also urged governments to invest in early detection programmes and to strengthen cancer registries to better track trends and allocate resources effectively.
"If we do not act now, the health and economic costs will be catastrophic," a WHO spokesperson said, underscoring the urgency of global cooperation to curb the impending rise.