I made a few approximate calculations to estimate the importance of finding effective cures for cancer.
These are very rough estimates based on uncertain data, but definitely help understanding what we're trying to do and the importance of it.
I compared cancer with another disease: malaria.
There's no particular reason as to why I chose malaria, other that it's quite a widespread disease that causes a lot of troubles in certain places.
At the end of the toot I link all the sources I used, so that you can replicate the calculations if you wish; if you're going to do that maybe search for some better data, I didn't do any extensive research.
All data is referred to 2019, so we can exclude any effects due to covid limiting access to cures.
The cancer mortality rate changes with age, most people who die of cancer have more than 70 years.
Cancer deaths under 14 years: 0.40% of the total
Malaria deaths under 14 years: 56.81% of the total
Cancer total deaths: 10 million
Malaria total deaths: 558,000
Cancer deaths under 14: 40,000
Malaria deaths under 14: 317,000
So, as you can see cancer kills many more people than malaria, almost 18 times as many; however most of those people have more than 70 years and the global life expectancy is 73 years, thus it is not decreasing the length of life of people significantly.
Malaria kills much less people, however most of the people who die of malaria are children below 5 year, thus malaria kills most of the people 65 years before they would be expected to die.
Even though malaria kills less people than cancer overall, it kills almost 8 times more children below 14 than cancer.
I believe this rush in investing to find a cure for cancer to be stupid.
It would be nice to find a cure for cancer, but I believe there are more important diseases to cure in the world.
Unfortunately, most of the money and even public research is focused on cancer and not other critical diseases.
Sources:
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/malaria-death-rates-by-age?country=~OWID_WRL
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/cancer-death-rates-by-age?time=latest&country=~OWID_WRL
https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/malaria
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamaoncology/fullarticle/2787350
https://ourworldindata.org/life-expectancy
@UmWerker @OpenCulture libraries existed for centuries without devaluing books and authors' talents, it was the publishing industry and the platformization of media via companies like amazon that did that. as for AI replacing human authors, that's not happening any time soon.
Public Library Receipt Shows How Much Money You’ve Saved by Borrowing Books, Instead of Buying Them
https://www.openculture.com/2019/08/public-library-receipt.html https://t.co/sXcK0uHnnm
Quick info sheet on OpenAlex, a free, open, and global alternative to Scopus or Web of Science, with scholarly papers, researchers, journals, and institutions and their interrelations.
https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/rest/items/item_5012153_3/component/file_5012154/content
https://www.reddit.com/r/Open_Science/comments/wut2en/quick_info_sheet_on_openalex_a_free_open_and/?utm_source=ifttt
One of the first useful (and needed) programs I wrote for a friend, in the mid '80, took the data from the memory of a Leica total station via COM1: and created a DXF file of the surveyed points, with numbers and elevations, to feed to a pirate copy of Autocad.
And I made it in Turbo Pascal 1.0.
@rastinza no, but the slides are in the repository: https://github.com/pietervdvn/MapComplete/blob/develop/Docs/Presentations/MapComplete_Theme_Building_Workshop_SOTM2022.odp
@apps I found a bug.
In the timeline I would expect long pressing on a link to pull up the menu with the sharing options.
What actually happens is this: long pressing on the link makes nothing happen.
If you open the toot by pressing on it and then go back to the timeline by pressing the back button, the sharing menu shows up.
Apparently the Irish have a PDO on Oriel Sea Salt.
This is absurd... What should be so particular about this salt to protect it?
Italian, MSc in chemistry specialized in cheminformatics and QSAR.
I'm interested in cooking and building stuff.
I love traveling, I lived in India, China, Slovenia, Poland and Spain.
Currently working in Spain in the field of genomics; and doing a PhD in Drug Development using Quantum Mechanics and Artificial Intelligence.
Don't take what I say as an insult, I have no bad intentions and I'm open to talk about it.
Don't star my toots, I find that often useless: if you liked it send a reply.
Consider boosting the toots, it's the only real way in which stuff is propagated through mastodon.