Prince Margaret in Toronto is a small audience in the center of Margaret cancer, approximately one and a half cancer patients, take advice on how to behave with hair loss during chemotherapy. This is not an unusual workshop for cancer patients – every patient in the room is 40.
It is part of a program in a cancer hospital created for diagnosis in the 20s and 30 years. The cancer in this age group was considered an anomaly, but Lancet’s final investigation offers The United States is growing in the US 34th most common cancer between the 34th most common cancer, and the minority, as well as small geners – and the reason is not clear.
Canada sees a similar example, but also Laura Burnett, led by Cancer Support Programs and Services in Canadian Cancer Society. According to the latest data, published Last year, four percent of the cases of cancer are expected to be diagnosed in young adults in young adults in juniors and 2023 in 2023, not a non-profit in an e-mail.
The most common types of 15 to 29 were thyroid, testicular and colorectal cancers, as well as lymphoma and leukemia. For those between 30 and 49, the nipple, thyroid and kolojon cancer are widespread.
“We have not published our 2024 number, but we expect to see similar examples,” Burnett said.
Canadian hospitals like Prince Margaret are also required to support young cancer patients.

“You see a young patient in the age of 20 or 30 years old, and it would be extraordinary,” said Toronton’s Sunnybrook Hospital, Dr. Shady Ashamalla, who worked in the colon and rectal cancer patients.
“Over time, it has begun to happen more and more, then we have taken a break, and that these patients need to formalize it because they have very different needs.”
Sunnybrook has been a Colorectal Cancer Clinic for young adults for five years.
‘Why now?’
Princess Margaret is open to all kinds of cancer patients with the 39-year-old program.
It is one of the largest hospital-based programs for young people in the country in 2015.
“At that time, we saw 30 new individuals in our program will be 30 new individuals. Now this number has increased twice,” he said.
Also, patients are trying to close patients with other young adults who are fighting cancer through group activities such as yoga or art class.

This aspect of the program is a god, says 25-year-old Kasia Tywonek, diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia last year. After the initial shock of the diagnosis – he thought that he was a concern before the doctors realized that he was cancer, he thought that he was very isolated. At all the time he was in the hospital, his age had only another patient.
“Many people were at least twice my year old.” “Although everyone is very beautiful, it was really difficult to be related to those who are against where they are in their lives.”
To add to insulation, Tywonek says he healed his peers in bed and put his peers.
“It’s just the year I’m sick, I got signed, we started their doctoral students, we graduated from school.”
Why remember me at this stage of my life when I don’t seem to be? “
The Prince Margaret program helped him to feel less alone.
“I gave me a new perspective if they were a year ahead of treatment.”
‘MILLION DOLLARS’
Researchers are still trying to understand why cancer rates are going to young people.
“This is a million dollar question and there are no definite answers,” he said, Coloreal Cancer Surgeon.
He says that the factors behind the growth have some thoughts – a diet, like sedentary lifestyle and stress, but more research needs.
Burnett with the Canadian Cancer Society, says that the latest research is a close eye.

“We know that alcohol and obesity, sedentary lifestyle and variable risk factors such as a non-healthy diet do not explain the tendencies we have seen. Therefore, we want to understand more about what causes it.”
For him, Gupta says that Prince wants to see the type of care proposed in the expansion of Margaret.
“My vision is the presence of every young man in connection with the entry of such supports, regardless of my zip code or which cancer hospital.”