BREAKING NEWS
Advertise with us >

Tobacco, diet, and pollution linked to 40% of preventable cancer cases: WHO

Tobacco

According to a study released by the World Health Organization (WHO) on the occasion of World Cancer Day, nearly 40 percent of cancer cases worldwide could be prevented by avoiding known risk factors that contribute to the disease.

The research highlights that behaviors and exposures such as tobacco use, alcohol consumption, air pollution, and certain infections account for a significant portion of cancer risk. In 2022 alone, the study estimates that 37 percent—or roughly 7.1 million—new cancer cases could have been prevented.

Key Risk Factors and Preventable Cancers

The WHO’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) analyzed 30 factors that increase cancer risk. Findings include:

Tobacco use is linked to 15 percent of all cancer cases.

Other major contributors include infectious agents (10 percent) and alcohol consumption (3 percent).

Additional risk factors include obesity, physical inactivity, ultraviolet (UV) exposure from sunlight, and air pollution.

The study emphasizes that cancers with the highest potential for prevention—nearly 50 percent of cases—include lung, stomach, and cervical cancers. Lung cancer is primarily associated with tobacco use and air pollution, stomach cancer is linked to Helicobacter pylori infection, and cervical cancer is mostly caused by HPV, against which vaccines are effective.

Gender Differences in Preventable Cancer Cases

The research indicates that men have a higher proportion of preventable cancer cases compared to women—45 percent versus 30 percent. Among these, about one-quarter of preventable cancers in men are due to tobacco, compared with 11 percent in women.

WHO experts called on governments worldwide to implement strict tobacco control measures, ensure access to vaccines for preventable infections such as HPV, improve air quality, promote healthy diets, and encourage physical activity.

The study concludes that reducing the global cancer burden requires addressing other non-communicable disease risk factors as well, including tobacco, alcohol, ultra-processed foods, and environmental pollutants.

This research represents the first global analysis demonstrating that a significant portion of cancer cases could be avoided through targeted prevention strategies.

Karachi’s Air Pollution: The City That Can’t Breathe

Smog and traffic pollution covering Karachi’s skyline.

Pakistan’s largest city and economic hub — has become one of the most polluted cities globally.
According to The Nation (Mar 4, 2025), Karachi’s Air Quality Index (AQI) reached 179, categorized as “unhealthy.” At times in 2023, the AQI exceeded 200, ranking the city 9th most polluted in the world.

Main Causes

  • Vehicular emissions: Over 4 million vehicles on Karachi’s roads run on low-quality fuel.
  • Industrial smoke: Factories release toxic gases without emission control systems.
  • Garbage burning: According to The News (Dec 2023), open burning contributes over 30% of airborne particulate matter.
  • Construction dust: Continuous urban expansion adds high levels of PM2.5 pollutants.

Health Impacts

The News International (Feb 2024) found that Karachi’s PM2.5 levels are 25.8 times higher than WHO’s safe limit, increasing cases of asthma, lung infections, and heart disease.

Policy Gaps

Despite these dangers, environmental laws are weakly enforced. As The Nation (Mar 2024) noted, Karachi ranks among the top 10 most polluted cities worldwide, yet lacks a comprehensive clean air policy.

Way Forward

  • Promote electric buses and hybrid vehicles.
  • Enforce industrial emission standards.
  • Expand urban green belts and forests.
  • Launch public awareness campaigns on clean air.

Conclusion

Karachi’s air pollution crisis endangers millions. Without strict regulation and long-term strategy, the city’s environment — and public health — will continue to deteriorate.