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SupportWhy Cancer Appears More Common in Western Countries

Cancer rates are often reported as being higher in Western countries compared to India. But is this difference only about lifestyle, or does reporting play a role too? In this episode of The Orange Club Podcast, Dr. Vijay Agarwal spoke with Dhruv Gupta, Co-founder of Orange Health Labs, about the factors that shape these statistics.
Watch the clip here: Why Cancer More Common in Western Countries?
Does Living Longer Raise the Odds?
One key reason cancer seems more common in the West is that people there live longer. As Dr. Vijay Agarwal explains, the longer we live, the greater the chance of developing cancer at some stage. With higher life expectancy in Western countries, the numbers naturally appear larger.
What Better Detection Reveals
Access to advanced healthcare means cancers are diagnosed earlier and more often in the West. In contrast, many cases in India remain underreported or undetected. This difference in detection skews the statistics, making cancer appear far less common here than it truly is.
How Lifestyle Risks Differ Across Countries
Lifestyle also plays an important role. In India, smoking and alcohol are among the leading contributors to cancer. In Western countries, obesity, physical inactivity, and certain sexually transmitted infections are more significant drivers. The patterns vary, but the risks exist everywhere in different forms.
Dr. Vijay Agarwal explores this further in the 1st episode of The Orange Club Podcast: What's Really Causing Cancer in Modern Times?

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