EU stumps up 4 billion euros in fight against cancer
Brussels, Feb 3 (AFP/APP): The European Commission on Wednesday unveiled a four-billion-euro ($4.8-billion) plan to prevent, treat and research cancer in the EU as part of a bigger project for an integrated health policy.
Health Commissioner Stella Kyriakides, launching the “Beating Cancer Plan” on the eve of World Cancer Day, said the goal was to ensure EU citizens had the same chances of survival no matter which member state they live in.
She said it is “unacceptable that today we have different access to prevention programmes across the EU, different rates for early diagnosis, early detection, treatment and of course survival”. The plan aims to reduce smoking, alcohol consumption and pollution over the coming years and to promote a healthy lifestyle to reduce the 40 percent of cancer cases that are preventable.
It also sets a goal of vaccinating 90 percent of girls in the European Union against the human papillomaviruses that can cause cervical cancer. And it will support increased screening of brest, cervical and colorectal cancers and look at extending those to prostate, lung and gastric cancers.
The European Commission said there are 2.7 million people diagnosed with cancer in the EU, and every year around 1.3 million die of it. Across Europe, there are 12 million cancer survivors, living with varying degrees of need.
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