Make Friday Fruity
Fruity Friday, is a fundraising campaign launched by the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF UK) to increase public awareness of the links between diet, nutrition and cancer prevention. The annual event also aims to raise valuable funds for cancer research and education programmes of cancer prevention.
Fruity Friday coincides with WCRF UK’s annual Cancer Prevention Week which is being held between 9th and 15th of May 2011. The purpose of Cancer Prevention Week is to promote the message that cancer is a largely preventable disease. It has been shown that around a third of the most common cancers could be prevented if people adopted healthy lifestyle choices, including eating healthily, being more physically active and maintaining a healthy weight.
The Cancer Stats – Worldwide and UK
Data reports from Cancer Research UK shows that globally, an estimated 12.7 million people were diagnosed with cancer in 2008.
An estimated 4.2 million men died from cancer worldwide in 2008. Lung cancer is by far the biggest killer, accounting for almost one in four (23%) cancer deaths in men.
Liver and stomach cancers are also big cancer killers in men worldwide (11% each).
Similarly around 3.3 million women died from cancer worldwide in 2008. Breast and lung cancers are the most common killers, accounting for 14% and 13% of deaths, respectively.
Evidence from the Latest UK Cancer Incidence Year and Mortality Year Summary shows that in the UK, 309,527 cases of cancer were diagnosed in 2008. Of these cancer cases 155,326 were men and 154,201 were women. In 2008 there were 156,594 cancer deaths, of which 81,403 were men and 74,829 were women. The UK incidence rate is slightly higher than the average in the more developed regions of the world, and more than 75% higher than the average in the less developed regions.
Recommendations
Overall, scientists have estimated that about third (39%) of the 12 most common types of cancer cases in the UK could be prevented if people made healthier lifestyle choices.
The evidence comes from WCRF The Expert Report which was published in 2007, having taken six years to produce, it is renowned as the most comprehensive report ever produced on the link between lifestyle and cancer risk. The research outlined in the report was the basis used to develop the 10 recommendations for cancer prevention that people can incorporate into their daily lives.
Eating a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, wholegrains and pulses is one way to help prevent cancer. Scientific research shows that these types of food may protect against cancer because they contain vitamins and minerals which help keep the body healthy and strengthen our immune system. They are also good sources of substances like phytochemicals which are biologically active compounds that can help to protect cells in the body from damage that can lead to cancer.
Further recommendations also include being physically active for at least thirty minutes a day, limiting alcohol consumption and avoiding smoking. For a full list of the recommendations to help prevent cancer please click here.
RSPH and Health Promotion – What You Can Do?
At RSPH Training Solutions we take health seriously and we believe that through education and training, people can learn to make better lifestyle choices and positively influence people around them. We are currently running a 5 day Level 2 Award in Health Promotion programme, which has specifically been developed to meet the increasing needs of a wide range of individuals to acquire fundamental knowledge and skills in health promotion. The Award provides candidates with an opportunity to work and train within a multi-disciplinary group, exploring and examining basic theory in relation to the concepts, influences and determinants of health. For further information please contact Nicolette Boustaoui or by phone on: 0203 177 1625.
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