UPDATE: Obamacare will not cover cancer patients who are age 75 and older! OK...not yet...but Obamacare is the first step to nationalized (read Universal) healthcare. So...I thought I would get ahead of the curve, and show you all what is happening in the United Kingdom! Think this won't happen under Obamacare...Think again smart-guy!
Too
old to be given cancer treatment: NHS is 'writing off' patients who are over 75
- Young lung cancer sufferers are only 10 per cent
more likely to die within five years than their continental counterparts
- But pensioners with the disease have 44 per cent less
chance of survival
- The figure for stomach cancer – at 45 per cent – is
even worse
PUBLISHED: 19:20 EST, 23 January 2014
| UPDATED: 03:04 EST, 24 January 2014
Pensioners with cancer are being written off
as too old to treat, campaigners said yesterday.
They cited figures showing survival rates for
British patients aged 75 and over are among the worst in Europe.
Young lung cancer sufferers are only 10 per
cent more likely to die within five years than their continental counterparts.
But pensioners with the disease have 44 per
cent less chance of survival.
The figure for stomach cancer – at 45 per
cent – is even worse.
And Britons with prostate cancer are a fifth
less likely to survive than Europeans if they are 85 and over.
Just 43 per cent live for five years,
compared with up to 67 per cent over the Channel.
Patients in their 70s and 80s with kidney
cancer have a 32 per cent survival rate, compared with 46-53 per cent in
Europe.
Ciarán Devane, of Macmillan Cancer Support,
which helped produce the figures, said: ‘It’s wrong to write off older people
as too old for treatment. With a proper assessment and appropriate treatment,
our research shows that many older cancer patients can live for a long time and
can even be cured.
‘While it’s good news that so many older
people are benefiting from treatment, many thousands more could live longer if
our survival rates for over 65s matched those in comparable countries.
The barriers to getting treatment – which
include age discrimination and inadequate assessment methods – must be tackled
now so more older people can survive cancer and live for many years.’
The research from Macmillan and the National
Cancer Intelligence Network shows that more than 130,000 Britons have survived
for at least ten years after being diagnosed with cancer at 65 or over.
The study, which is the first of its kind,
also reveals there are more than 8,000 people alive today who have lived for
the same time period following diagnosis at 80 or over.
Octogenarian women do particularly well, with
twice as many surviving for ten or 20 years as men.
Survival rates for the over-75s are worse in Britain
than Europe for nine out of ten common cancers.
A small survival advantage is seen for
sufferers of melanoma skin cancer.
Caroline Abrahams, of the charity Age UK,
said: ‘It’s good news that with the right care and treatment older people can
survive for many years after cancer.
'It is often forgotten that people over 75
represent a third of all cancer diagnoses and a half of all cancer
deaths.
‘People over 80 with the disease are the only
age group in which mortality rates have got worse in the last 40 years.
'An individual’s date of birth should not be
used as a proxy for health and fitness or influence treatment decisions.
‘Assessments of older people must be based on
their needs and not simply on their age. Anything else is blatant age discrimination.’
Mark Porter, chairman of council at the
British Medical Association, said: ‘It is important that all healthcare
professionals ensure that patients are treated on the basis of clinical need.
‘With an increasingly ageing population, it
should be a key part of medical professionalism to guarantee that older
patients are treated with the care and respect they deserve.’
Around 60,000 cases of cancer are diagnosed
each year in Britons aged 75 and over.
One in four are prostate sufferers. Gerald
Shenton, 78, from Staffordshire, said: ‘I was first diagnosed with renal cell
carcinoma in 2000, and I am still here 13 years later, although I’ve suffered
from every side effect in the book.
‘I never really had any aftercare because I
have always been treated as end stage. I was turned down for a possible
treatment twice, being told unofficially that it was because of my age.’
Mick Peake, of the National Cancer
Intelligence Network, said: ‘It is vital all patients receive the best and most
effective treatment based on the nature of their cancer and their fitness for
treatment and that chronological age alone is not the deciding factor.’
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