Is Cancer Targeting Young People? Key Cancer Prevention Tips for Men and Women
- Elva Chen
- 20 hours ago
- 3 min read
Many people think cancer only affects the elderly, and some believe women are safer. In reality, neither is true.
Who does cancer favor most? How should different genders prevent it? What should young people watch out for? Today, we discuss these questions with authoritative data.
Cancer Is Affecting Younger People
Data released by the National Cancer Center (2024) shows that young people aged 15–39 account for about 5% of all new cancer cases. While the incidence rate is relatively low, it is rising year by year.
Common cancers among young people:
Thyroid cancer
Breast cancer
Leukemia
Lymphoma
Colorectal cancer
Cancers Becoming More Common in Young People
Colorectal cancer
Patients under 30: rose from 1.7% to 3.5% in a decade
Aged 20–40: exceeds 15% of all colorectal cancer cases
Thyroid & breast cancer
Fastest‑rising incidence in women under 35
Gastric cancer
Incidence in 19–35‑year‑olds has doubled in 30 years
Youngest recorded patient: 13 years old

Why Are Young People More Vulnerable?
Besides genetics, risk is strongly linked to unhealthy lifestyles:
Chronic stress
High‑oil, high‑salt, high‑sugar takeout
Sedentary behavior, lack of exercise
Irregular sleep, staying up late
Ignoring symptoms and skipping early screening
Youth ≠ immunity from cancer — many risks are just dormant.
Who Has Higher Cancer Risk: Men or Women?
Overall, men have higher incidence and mortality rates.
Male cancer incidence: 212.67 / 100,000
Female cancer incidence: 208.08 / 100,000
Annual cancer deaths: men roughly twice as many as women
Key Cancers for Men
Lung, colorectal, liver, gastric, esophageal, prostate…
Lung cancer: 62% male patients; top cause of cancer death in men, linked to smoking, drinking, heavy socializing, and ignoring symptoms.
Key Cancers for Women
Breast cancer: nearly 1 in 6 female cancer patients; peak age 45–55
Thyroid cancer: rising sharply, now 3rd most common female cancer
Cervical cancer: mainly caused by persistent HPV infection; only vaccine‑preventable cancer
Important note: Over the past 15–20 years, lung cancer incidence has risen in young non‑smoking women, especially in East Asia. Likely linked to environmental exposure (kitchen fumes, PM2.5), gene mutations, and hormonal susceptibility.
Prevention tip: Minimize kitchen fumes — use efficient range hoods, reduce stir‑frying/deep‑frying, keep kitchens ventilated, and use air purifiers indoors.

Cancer Prevention & Screening by Age & Gender
Early detection + early treatment saves lives. Early‑stage cancer cure rates are far higher than late‑stage.
Early gastric cancer: 80–90% 5‑year survival
Advanced gastric cancer: <20% 5‑year survival
Cancer prevention relies on healthy habits + scientific screening, not luck.
5 Habits for Everyone
Eat well: More vegetables; less barbecue, processed/pickled meats, sweet drinks.
Move daily: 150 mins/week brisk walking/jogging; avoid prolonged sitting.
Sleep enough: 7–8 hours/night; chronic sleep loss raises cancer risk.
No smoking/drinking: Smoking increases lung cancer risk 15–30×; alcohol damages the liver directly.
See a doctor early: Check promptly for blood in stool, sudden weight loss, persistent cough, etc.
Screening for Men
After 40: Annual low‑dose chest CT (regular X‑rays miss early lung cancer)
After 40: Colonoscopy + gastroscopy every 5 years
After 50: Add prostate PSA test
Screening for Women
25–30: HPV + TCT cervical screening every 3–5 years
Before 40: Monthly breast self‑exam; annual breast + thyroid ultrasound (high‑risk groups)
After 40: Add mammogram
9–45: Get HPV vaccine as early as possible
After 45: Colonoscopy + gastroscopy every 5 years

Final Message
30–50% of cancers are preventable.
Cancer prevention is not just for the elderly or the sick — it’s small daily choices for everyone.
One less bubble tea
One hour earlier to bed
One reliable checkup per year
These work better than any supplements. Don’t wait for symptoms to care for your health — protect it early.



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