News Lifestyle Warning! Late marriage can be an invitation to cancer in women, say doctors

Warning! Late marriage can be an invitation to cancer in women, say doctors

New Delhi: In this fast running world, people have tend to become much more career oriented. They are giving more attention to their profession than to their personal lives and this applies for both men

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New Delhi: In this fast running world, people have tend to become much more career oriented. They are giving more attention to their profession than to their personal lives and this applies for both men and women.

In fact, in a quest to become successful, it is often observed that women delay getting married. But little do they now that getting married at an older age can invoke several health problems including cancer.

Yes! You read that right. Late marriage can be an invitation for cancer in women in India like breast and cervical cancer.

According the recent reports, doctors claim that late marriages, multiple sex partners and late pregnancy have contributed to incidence of cancer among women,

The report stated that 46% of women suffering from cancer are under 50, which is a worrying trend that's likely to continue in the coming years due to lifestyle changes.

"Two per cent of the Indian women suffering from cancer are in 20 to 30 years age group, 16 per cent are in 30 to 40, 28 per cent are in 40 to 50 age group. So, almost 46 per cent women patients are below 50," said Sameer Kaul, Senior Consultant of Surgical Oncology at Indraprastha Apollo Hospital to a leading daily.

He said an increasing number of patients belong to 25 to 40 years of age, which is an "alarming" situation.

Since discussing private body parts is a taboo in many communities in India, women prefer to remain silent until their condition becomes unbearable or incurable, Kaul said.

"Discomfort with the process of diagnosis and treatment is an additional concern. Research conducted in other countries suggests women perceive mammography exams as uncomfortable, and these feelings are shared by women in India too," he said.

The disease, especially breast and ovarian cancer, also carries a stigma for women, he said.

According to the National Institute of Cancer Prevention and Research (NICPR), one woman dies of cervical cancer every eight minutes in India.

For every two women newly diagnosed with breast cancer, one woman dies of it in India. The data also shows that as many as 2,500 persons die every day due to tobacco-related diseases in India.

Kaul said more young women seem to suffer from breast cancer these days than older women.

"Young breast cancer patients have special concerns. Their cancers tend to be more advanced, more aggressive, more likely to be caused by an inherited defective gene, and may respond differently to treatment than do breast tumours in older women."

"Issues of infertility, body image, and the disease's impact on family life, relationships, career and finances also are different for younger women," said Kaul.