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Thousands of U.S. Cancer Patients Died From COVID Complications during the first 10 months of the pandemic, Study Finds

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Thousands of U.S. Cancer Patients Died From COVID Complications during the first 10 months of the pandemic, Study Finds​

Oct. 3, 2022, at 10:27 a.m.

By Denise Mann HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Oct. 3, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- New research confirms that COVID-19 can be life-threatening for certain cancer patients: More than 16,500 Americans with cancer died from complications related to coronavirus infection during the first 10 months of the pandemic.

"People with cancer, especially blood cancers, who may be immunocompromised, and prostate cancer, who tend to be older, may be at greater risk of COVID-19 complications and death," said study author Xuesong Han, scientific director of health services research at the American Cancer Society.

For the study, researchers identified 3,142 cancer deaths with COVID-19 as a contributing cause and 13,419 COVID-19 deaths with cancer as a contributing cause from March 2020 to December 2020 using death certificate information for U.S. residents. During this time, there were nearly 337,400 cancer deaths that were not related to COVID-19.

There were significantly more COVID-19-related cancer deaths than there were cancer deaths not related to COVID-19 in people with blood cancers, 23.3% vs. 9.6%, respectively, and prostate cancer, 12.4% vs. 5.5%, respectively, the study showed.

COVID-related cancer deaths were more likely to occur in large cities and in males, people aged 85 years or older, and racial/ethnic minorities.

"People receiving cancer treatment generally have a weakened immune system because of the cancer itself and/or its treatment," Han explained. "Moreover, people diagnosed with cancer tend to be older and have other co-morbid conditions that are associated with severe COVID-19 illness, such as heart disease, chronic diseases of the lung and kidney, diabetes and obesity."

Most cancer deaths that were unrelated to COVID-19 occurred at home or in hospice facilities. In contrast, COVID-complicated deaths from cancer were more likely to take place in hospitals or nursing homes/long-term care facilities, the study showed.

The message is clear: People being treated for cancer must take precautions to lower their risk of contracting COVID-19, including staying current on vaccinations, avoiding crowded indoor spaces and wearing masks in public, Han said.

"Up-to-date vaccination is important even if patients had a prior COVID-19 infection because people can be infected with COVID-19 more than once," she said. "It is also important for family members and informal caregivers to be up to date with COVID-19 vaccinations, to minimize the risk of transmission."

The new data predates the availability of COVID vaccines and medications to treat the virus.

"When more recent surveillance data for 2021 and 2022 become available for research, we plan to monitor if and how much COVID-related cancer [deaths] decreased nationally after the vaccines became available," Han said. "Research should closely monitor the lasting symptoms of COVID-19 infection among cancer patients and survivors, to inform clinical practice."

The research was published Sept. 29 in the journal JAMA Oncology.

The findings mirror what Dr. Tobias Hohl witnessed in his practice during the early days of the pandemic. He is the chief of infectious diseases service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City.
The risk of dying from COVID-19 was also higher in people with lung cancer at his hospital, he said.

"COVID-19's main target organ is the lung and respiratory tract so when you have cancer at the same site, it can create problems that you aren’t able to compensate for," explained Hohl, who was not part of the study.

The vaccine has definitely saved lives, he added.

"We are in a much better place than we were in 2020," Hohl said. "Now, we have fewer cancer patients with severe COVID-19 than we did in 2020, despite the rapidly spreading Omicron variants."

His advice? Get the updated booster shots as soon as you are eligible and don't forget your annual flu shot to keep your immune system primed. "We are much better at treating COVID-19, so patients do better," he said. "Cancer is a far more significant health problem in 2022 than the risk of COVID-19."

Medical oncologist Dr. Marleen Meyers agreed. She is director of the survivorship program at NYU Langone's Perlmutter Cancer Center in New York City.

"In the very early days of the pandemic, before masks were recommended, susceptible [cancer] patients were in hospitals and offices with high exposure to the virus," said Meyers, who had no role in the study.
Vaccines have definitely helped. Still, "there are some instances where the timing of the vaccine must be considered so all patients should check with their doctors," she said.

 
Having the time of your life googling news from "enemy" countries, eh, Wumao ?

I suppose being from a place with no free media helps.
 
Having the time of your life googling news from "enemy" countries, eh, Wumao ?

I suppose being from a place with no free media helps.
Slaves are always more eager to defend their masters than their masters themselves, lol, you should suppose google can be used in China, shouldn't yu?
 

Thousands of U.S. Cancer Patients Died From COVID Complications during the first 10 months of the pandemic, Study Finds​

Oct. 3, 2022, at 10:27 a.m.

By Denise Mann HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Oct. 3, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- New research confirms that COVID-19 can be life-threatening for certain cancer patients: More than 16,500 Americans with cancer died from complications related to coronavirus infection during the first 10 months of the pandemic.

"People with cancer, especially blood cancers, who may be immunocompromised, and prostate cancer, who tend to be older, may be at greater risk of COVID-19 complications and death," said study author Xuesong Han, scientific director of health services research at the American Cancer Society.

For the study, researchers identified 3,142 cancer deaths with COVID-19 as a contributing cause and 13,419 COVID-19 deaths with cancer as a contributing cause from March 2020 to December 2020 using death certificate information for U.S. residents. During this time, there were nearly 337,400 cancer deaths that were not related to COVID-19.

There were significantly more COVID-19-related cancer deaths than there were cancer deaths not related to COVID-19 in people with blood cancers, 23.3% vs. 9.6%, respectively, and prostate cancer, 12.4% vs. 5.5%, respectively, the study showed.

COVID-related cancer deaths were more likely to occur in large cities and in males, people aged 85 years or older, and racial/ethnic minorities.

"People receiving cancer treatment generally have a weakened immune system because of the cancer itself and/or its treatment," Han explained. "Moreover, people diagnosed with cancer tend to be older and have other co-morbid conditions that are associated with severe COVID-19 illness, such as heart disease, chronic diseases of the lung and kidney, diabetes and obesity."

Most cancer deaths that were unrelated to COVID-19 occurred at home or in hospice facilities. In contrast, COVID-complicated deaths from cancer were more likely to take place in hospitals or nursing homes/long-term care facilities, the study showed.

The message is clear: People being treated for cancer must take precautions to lower their risk of contracting COVID-19, including staying current on vaccinations, avoiding crowded indoor spaces and wearing masks in public, Han said.

"Up-to-date vaccination is important even if patients had a prior COVID-19 infection because people can be infected with COVID-19 more than once," she said. "It is also important for family members and informal caregivers to be up to date with COVID-19 vaccinations, to minimize the risk of transmission."

The new data predates the availability of COVID vaccines and medications to treat the virus.

"When more recent surveillance data for 2021 and 2022 become available for research, we plan to monitor if and how much COVID-related cancer [deaths] decreased nationally after the vaccines became available," Han said. "Research should closely monitor the lasting symptoms of COVID-19 infection among cancer patients and survivors, to inform clinical practice."

The research was published Sept. 29 in the journal JAMA Oncology.

The findings mirror what Dr. Tobias Hohl witnessed in his practice during the early days of the pandemic. He is the chief of infectious diseases service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City.
The risk of dying from COVID-19 was also higher in people with lung cancer at his hospital, he said.

"COVID-19's main target organ is the lung and respiratory tract so when you have cancer at the same site, it can create problems that you aren’t able to compensate for," explained Hohl, who was not part of the study.

The vaccine has definitely saved lives, he added.

"We are in a much better place than we were in 2020," Hohl said. "Now, we have fewer cancer patients with severe COVID-19 than we did in 2020, despite the rapidly spreading Omicron variants."

His advice? Get the updated booster shots as soon as you are eligible and don't forget your annual flu shot to keep your immune system primed. "We are much better at treating COVID-19, so patients do better," he said. "Cancer is a far more significant health problem in 2022 than the risk of COVID-19."

Medical oncologist Dr. Marleen Meyers agreed. She is director of the survivorship program at NYU Langone's Perlmutter Cancer Center in New York City.

"In the very early days of the pandemic, before masks were recommended, susceptible [cancer] patients were in hospitals and offices with high exposure to the virus," said Meyers, who had no role in the study.
Vaccines have definitely helped. Still, "there are some instances where the timing of the vaccine must be considered so all patients should check with their doctors," she said.


Great news.

US government can now pay less Social Security and Medicare bills.
 
They would have just easily died from flu and other bacterial infections being immuno-compromised. COVID is not particularly deadly on an individual basis, but its ability to spread is what caused the widespread disruption and fatalities. We can easily deal with that with vaccination and face mask mandates.
 
This is also what crossed my mind, did US do it to its people on purpose?

Hitler tried eugenics but failed.

US is taking a different and practical appraoch.

Just get rid of unhealthy people to make the country more productive and competitive.

Also, With Baby boomers retiring and Social Security funds already eaten up by the politicians, the only option left was to introduce a plague and vaccines that are worse than the disease to elimnate the retired people enmasse.
 
Slaves are always more eager to defend their masters than their masters themselves, lol, you should suppose google can be used in China, shouldn't yu?
At the very least, in fact, spl, you literal keyboard CCP propagandist bots would know about VPNs .. The word google is also a euphemism for "internet web search" generally.

anyway, keep doing what you do, it is your job after all.
 
At the very least, in fact, spl, you literal keyboard CCP propagandist bots would know about VPNs .. The word google is also a euphemism for "internet web search" generally.

anyway, keep doing what you do, it is your job after all.
Ha, job? are you one of them?

71PJkckMemL.jpg


Is this dude you?
_20220918234216-png.882452
 
Thousands are just too few considering the magnitude of the pandemic in US, any way the US gov wants to weed out these undesirable population all along.
 
weak sauce, wumao.. up your game, little chinese man
 
weak sauce, wumao.. up your game, little chinese man
lOl, Indians are much weaker and shorter than most of the world, do you see many Indians competing in the Olympic Games?

86647163.jpg
 

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