The World Health Organisation has issued a warning that cancer, already claiming ten million lives each year, could nearly double its global reach by 2050 if humanity does not change course. The projection arrives not merely as a medical forecast but as a moral reckoning — one that lays bare how profoundly a person's birthplace and income determine whether a diagnosis becomes a manageable illness or a death sentence. Kenya, where 30,000 people die of cancer annually, stands as a vivid illustration of a global inequality that experts insist is not inevitable, but chosen.
WHO warns cancer cases could nearly double to 35M by 2050 without urgent action
Approximately 10 million cancer deaths annually worldwide; 30,000 Kenyans die yearly from cancer; 45% of affected people suffer financial hardship and over 50% experience mental health struggles.