wjz-13 1057-the-fan 1300logo2_67x35
WJZ Celebrates 2013 Graduates: Upload & View Photos Of Your Graduation

Local

Cancer Death Rates Drop 20 Percent Since 1991

View Comments
Image
Mike Schuh 370x278

Reporting Mike Schuh

Featured Gallery
May Is Asthma Awareness Month: Celebrities With Asthma

For more trusted health

news and information,

visit CBS Baltimore's

Popular Entertainment Photo Galleries

Guinness World RecordsGuinness World Records

Best Celebrity Baby BumpsBest Celebrity Baby Bumps

The Biggest Nerds In Pop CultureThe Biggest Nerds In Pop Culture

Celeb Hotties With Great LipsCeleb Hotties With Great Lips

Stars With Tax ProblemsStars With Tax Problems

» More Photo Galleries

BALTIMORE (WJZ)—Good news in the fight against cancer: not only are fewer people being diagnosed with the disease, more are surviving once they get it.

Mike Schuh reports.

More than a half a million people are predicted to die this year in America from all forms of cancer. Though the overall number is staggering, the predicted deaths are showing a decrease from a high reached in 1991.

Twice a week at Franklin Square Hospital’s cancer center, Dr. Stephen Noga checks in on an amazing patient.

Drop-by-drop, a string of new medicines has kept Juanita Massey alive.

“I don’t know how long I have,” said Massey, living with cancer. “The disease says I shouldn’t be sitting here talking to you. That’s what the prognosis was.”

Her bone cancer was so bad that 18 years ago, they told her to get her affairs in order and that she had six weeks to live.

“My husband and I took my life insurance because they signed for it. I was going to die. We went to every amusement park, including the big one in Florida,” Massey said.

But better drugs and her faith intervened.

“Even though I have survived, and that’s a story in itself, the everyday is ‘What are you going to do? How are you going to prepare for death and live?’” Massey said.

Massey’s doctor heads up Medstar Health Cancer Network.

“For the first time actually in 20 years we can actually say the death rate from cancer is down. It’s down by 20 percent,” Noga said.

It’s predicted that nearly 600,000 Americans will be diagnosed this year as decades of hard work is paying off.

“Really this started in the 60s with smoking cessation, and we’re now finally seeing the benefits of that,” Noga said.

Better education, screening and treatment allow for Massey 18 years after she thought she’d die to be able to say that this day and every day is a good day.

“Juanita has as long as God says I have,” she said.

The American Cancer Society says the three most commonly diagnosed cancers are: breast,  lung and colorectal.

Overall deaths are down, but the incidence of cancer is higher for melanoma, and cancers of the liver, thyroid and pancreas.

The Cancer Society predicts there will be 1,660,290 new cases of cancer in 2013.

To read the full report from the American Cancer Society, click here.

View Comments
blog comments powered by Disqus
Listen Live!

Follow CBS Baltimore

TV Schedule

Full Program Grid
7:00 PM CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley
7:30 PM Entertainment Tonight
8:00 PM Two and a Half Men
8:30 PM Mike & Molly
9:00 PM Criminal Minds
11:00 PM Eyewitness News at 11
11:35 PM Late Show with David Letterman

Poll Of The Day

Select a Live Stream