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Prevention
Doctors cannot always explain why one person gets
cancer and another does not. However, scientists have studied general
patterns of cancer in the population to learn what things around us and what
things we do in our lives may increase our chance of developing cancer.
Anything that increases a person’s chance
of developing a disease is called a
risk factor; anything that decreases a person’s chance of developing a
disease is called a
protective factor. Some of the risk factors for cancer can be avoided, but
many cannot. For example, although you can choose to quit smoking, you cannot
choose which
genes you have
inherited from your parents. Both smoking and inheriting specific genes
could be considered risk factors for certain kinds of cancer, but only smoking
can be avoided.
Prevention means avoiding the risk factors and increasing the protective
factors that can be controlled, so that the chance of developing cancer
decreases.
Although many risk factors can be avoided,
it is important to keep in mind that avoiding risk factors does not guarantee
that you will not get cancer. Also, most people with a particular risk factor
for cancer do not actually get the disease. Some people are more sensitive than
others are to factors that can cause cancer. Talk to your doctor about methods
of preventing cancer that might be effective for you.
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