
The Who’s International Agency for Research on Cancer blamed rising cancer rates
on an aging population, along with tobacco, alcohol, obesity and exposure to air pollution.
ChildrensHealthDefense.org
Story at a glance:
- The World Health Organization’s (WHO) International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) estimates more than 35 million new cancer cases in 2050.
- This represents a 77% increase from the estimated 20 million cancer cases that occurred in 2022.
- WHO blamed the rising cancer rates on an aging population, along with tobacco, alcohol, obesity and exposure to air pollution.
- WHO ignored the emergence of rapid-growing “turbo cancers” in people who have received one or more COVID-19 shots.
- Many of these cancers are showing up in young people, many under age 30, with no family history of cancer; treatment protocols are available to help recover from post-jab injuries.
The WHO IARC released a daunting prediction of the global cancer burden. It estimates more than 35 million new cancer cases in 2050 — a 77% increase from the estimated 20 million cancer cases that occurred in 2022.
While WHO named an aging population as a key driver behind the increasing cancer burden, along with tobacco, alcohol, obesity and exposure to air pollution, what they’re ignoring is the concerning trend of turbo cancers that occur shortly after COVID-19 shots.
Continue Reading
Rating: 0.00/5 (0 votes cast)