Global Health Report Highlights Preventable Cancers, While China Bans Hidden Car Door Handles
A new global analysis revealed that approximately seven million cancer cases each year could be prevented through lifestyle changes, vaccinations, and reducing exposure to environmental pollutants, according to a report by World Health Organization (WHO) scientists. The report, the first of its kind, estimated that 37% of cancers are caused by avoidable factors, including infections, lifestyle choices, and environmental pollutants.
The WHO scientists emphasized the "powerful opportunity" to transform lives by addressing these preventable causes. The report highlighted cervical cancers caused by human papilloma virus (HPV) infections, which can be prevented through vaccination, as well as tumors caused by tobacco smoke.
In other news, China became the first country to ban hidden car door handles on electric vehicles (EVs), a design popularized by Tesla, BBC Technology reported. The ban followed scrutiny from safety watchdogs after deadly incidents involving EVs, including two fatal crashes in China involving Xiaomi EVs where power failures were suspected of preventing doors from being opened.
Under the new regulations, cars sold in China must have a mechanical release both inside and outside the doors, according to state media. The new rules are set to take effect on January 1, 2027.
Meanwhile, in Colombia, BBC reported that Colombian commandos are engaged in a "never-ending battle" against drug gangs. BBC's Orla Guerin joined the Jungle Commandos, a police special operations unit armed by the Americans and originally trained by Britain's SAS, on a mission to find cocaine labs in the Amazon jungle.
In the Arabian Sea, a US military spokesman said that an Iranian drone was shot down by an F-35C stealth fighter jet after it "aggressively approached" the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier on Tuesday. Capt Tim Hawkins, US Central Command spokesman, said the drone was approaching the ship with "unclear intent" approximately 500 miles from the Iranian coast. No US equipment was damaged and no service members were harmed.
In medical research, a new study published in the journal Cell explored a potential link between cancer and Alzheimer's disease, Fox News reported. The research, using mouse models, suggested that certain cancers release a protein called cystatin-C that can travel through the bloodstream and enter the brain, potentially offering a defense against Alzheimer's.
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