The growing cancer crisis in England was exposed today in the Mailonline interactive data file.
Experts have been demanding urgent measures for a long time to deal with the catastrophe that is being developed, asking for a “seismic change in our cancer care approach” to save thousands of people from premature death.
Now the numbers, packaged in a search tool, allow you to see exactly the probability that you develop the most common types of the disease, depending on your age, sex and place of residence.
Our interactive tool uses NHS figures in England that cover the 42 areas of medical care. You can search writing in your local area.
It occurs when the figures published this week suggest that the number of people living with cancer in the United Kingdom will reach a record of 3.4 million this year.
The data analyzed by the beneficial organization of MacMillan cancer support shows that approximately half a million more people will live with cancer in December than five years ago.
The increase, says the beneficial organization, is being driven by a growing population and aging and a gradual improvement in survival rates for some types of the disease.
According to Mailonline’s analysis, people living in the southwest are statistically the most likely to be diagnosed with cancer in England.
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The women living in Cornwall and the Sorlingas, Dorset and Devon Islands had the highest incidence of cancer per 100,000 people: 998.9, 986.1 and 967.7 respectively.
Among men, it was higher in Surrey Heartlands, Cornwall and the Sorlingas and Dorset Islands.
Among all age groups over 25 years in these places, skin cancer was the most common cancer diagnosed in both sexes.
However, skin cancer is not just the most common type in England. Our data also show that diagnoses are significantly higher in coastal areas.
In all age groups, the incidence of skin cancer stood at 358.5 percent among women, a fifth more than in non -coastal areas (292.4).
Among men was 608.7 percent, which is an increase of more than a quarter (513.2).
Experts have previously said to Mailonline that the difference in cancer rates throughout the country is probably due to the demography of people living in some areas, which makes them more risk of developing cancer.
Studies have also suggested that greater exposure to the sun on the coast is associated with greater incidence of skin cancer.
The women living in Cornwall and the Sorlingas, Dorset and Devon Islands had the highest incidence of cancer per 100,000 people: 998.9, 986.1 and 967.7 respectively. In the photo, Durdle Door in Dorset

The signs of skin cancer vary from harmless to obvious, but experts warn that treating cases in time is key to ensure that they do not spread or develop more.
Professor Karol Sikora, retired oncologist and former director of the Cancer Program of the World Health Organization, said: “Everything depends on the age of populations.
“The cities of the southern coast have many elderly residents, who run a much higher risk of cancer, compared to urban areas such as London, which have a younger population.”
It has been shown that the risk of cancer is closely related to age, since damage to cells that can trigger the disease accumulates over time.
But this does not mean that cancer does not appear in younger people.
Although they are still a minority, experts are concerned about the recent increase in cases of cancer in young people compared to historical levels, particularly in intestine cancer.
Mailonline’s analysis shows that intestine cancer diagnoses in women were higher in all age categories in Suffolk and the northeast of Essex, with 69.1 percent.
Herefordshire, Worcestershire, Hampshire and Wight Island with 67.8 and 66,8 per 100,000, respectively.
In the men, the highest figures were 96.2 per 100,000 in Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Tent, 95.9 in Herefordshire and Worcestershire and 94.2 in Lancashire and South Cumbria.
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Dame Deborah James, nicknamed the ‘intestinal baby’, raised more than £ 11.3 million for cancer investigation and is attributed to having increased awareness about the disease, which killed it in 2022, at 40.
However, among people aged 25 to 49, the rates were higher among women in Somerset, with 19,6 percent, and Glouceseshire, with 18 percent.
In comparison, it was only 6.1 percent in northwest London.
Both areas of medical care also headed the diagnostic table in men, with Gloudeshire registering 26.9 per 100,000 and Somerset, 25.4 percent.
The black country was the lowest with 6.7 percent.
Regardless of age, doctors urge the British to be attentive to cancer symptoms, such as a new and sudden bulge in the body, inexplicable bleeding and changes in intestinal habits.
Other signs of cancer vary according to the type of disease, but may include inexplicable weight loss, coughing that lasts three or more, swelling, new or changing moles, stomach pain or back, yellowish skin and fatigue.
According to Cancer Research UK, carcinomas and melanomas, a type of skin cancer, as well as lymphomas, a type of blood cancer, are the most common forms of the disease in young people.
It occurs when Macmillan suggested this week that more people who will ever live with cancer in the United Kingdom at the end of this year.

Intestine cancer can cause blood to have blood, a change in intestinal habit, a lump inside the intestine that can cause obstructions. Some people also suffer weight loss as a result of these symptoms.
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This includes Around 890,000 women with breast cancer, 610,000 men with prostate cancer, 390,000 people with intestine cancer and 120,000 with lung cancer.
The executive director of the beneficial organization, Gemma Peters, said: “The number of people living with cancer in the United Kingdom is increasing and, in many occasions, things are getting worse.”
‘There are unacceptable gaps between the best and worst experiences, and people are staying behind.
‘Behind these figures there are people with unique challenges and needs.
‘In Macmillan, we support people who live with cancer every day, helping them to manage the various ways in which cancer affects their lives.
‘We see how cancer affects relationships, works, finance and more of people, and how this can be even worse for some, simply who they are or where they live.
‘This must change. It is possible to improve, but only if we address cancer attention differently.
‘The governments throughout the United Kingdom have a unique opportunity to revolutionize cancer attention for the future.
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‘When addressing the gap in cancer care and ensuring that all patients, regardless of who are or where they live, can access first level care, we can establish a new standard for the United Kingdom.
“This is the opportunity of governments to shape their legacy for coming generations.”
The NHS bosses have argued for a long time that they are attending more patients than ever as part of the fight against cancer, despite the fall in performance.
For example, urgent derivations have doubled in a decade, largely thanks to government awareness campaigns that urge patients to present suspicious symptoms.
NHS bosses say that most patients affected by cancer are happy with the care they receive.
An annual satisfaction survey, in which more than 63,000 people participate, gives it an average score of 8.89 out of 10.
Three quarters (75.8 percent) also said that “they definitely received the proper level of support” from the hospital staff.
Survival rates are also at their highest point thanks to medical advances and plans designed to detect the disease in its initial stages, when it is easier to treat.

The NHS bosses have argued for a long time that they are attending more patients than ever as part of the fight against cancer, despite the fall in performance.

Survival rates are also at their highest point thanks to medical advances and plans designed to detect the disease in its initial stages, when it is easier to treat. These programs include temporary diagnostic centers in shopping centers, parking and soccer fields.
These programs include temporary diagnostic centers in shopping centers, parking and soccer fields.
But despite the importance of rapid access to diagnosis and treatment to improve results, NHS performance is still well below its objectives.
The latest monthly figures available by the Health Service show that the proportion of patients who received treatment within two months after an urgent cancer derivation was only 69.4 percent in November 2024.
The objective is 85 percent and has never been fulfilled.
In human terms, this meant that more than 8,000 cancer patients in England had to wait more than 62 days to start treatment.
Other Cancer performance figures are failing or barely manage to achieve the objectives.
Only 91 percent of patients began treatment within 31 days after their reserve in November, below the 96 percent objective.
But the objective of the NHS to inform at least 75 percent of patients with suspected cancer whether or not they have the disease for the second consecutive month.
Fast access to cancer care not only reduces the possibility that the disease spreads to other areas of the body, but can also mean that a patient does not need such extensive treatments as chemotherapy or radiotherapy or therefore.
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