Healthy Female Army
No Result
View All Result
  • Healthcare
  • Health and Medicine
  • Health News
  • Staying Healthy
  • Healthcare
  • Health and Medicine
  • Health News
  • Staying Healthy
No Result
View All Result
Healthy Female Army
No Result
View All Result
Home Healthcare

How COVID set back the fight against cancer, and why it’s only getting worse

by
June 14, 2023
in Healthcare
0
How COVID set back the fight against cancer, and why it’s only getting worse
0
SHARES
5
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

When COVID lockdowns began in early 2020, millions of people went without cancer screenings they otherwise would have gotten. The full cost of this lapse in cancer surveillance is only starting to come into focus, but early data suggests it could be immense.

And physicians fear this screening gap could continue getting wider in the years ahead because of other factors exacerbated by the pandemic, such as health care workforce shortages and altered patient habits. 

Screenings for cancer vary vastly in how they’re performed and how often they should be done, but many can only take place in a doctor’s office. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) estimated about 9.4 million people missed cancer screenings they normally would have gotten in 2020. 

This screening gap has been particularly extreme for certain forms of cancer.

A study published in May found that colorectal cancer screenings fell by 85 percent in the U.S. in the first couple of months of lockdown. Screenings for gastrointestinal (GI) cancers tend to be more arduous, with services like colonoscopies involving preparation the day before and anesthesia during the procedure.

Lucio Gordon, one of the authors of the study as well as president and managing physician of  Florida Cancer Specialists, told The Hill his clinic saw a “severe” drop in cancer patients coming in for screenings starting in March 2020.

“The drop was in the magnitude of almost 50 percent, if not more,” said Gordon. “I don’t think we are at the same levels of screening prior to the pandemic.”

Apart from GI cancers, Gordon estimates screenings for lung cancers were also disproportionately affected as they involve CT scans that can be performed only in an office.

For aggressive cancers like lung cancer, one or more years of missed screenings represent the difference between being able to cure the disease or having to start palliative or even hospice care.

After being thrown off schedule by the pandemic, many patients are slow to return for regular tests and procedures to detect cancers. While the COVID lockdowns are now in the rearview mirror and the public health emergency for the pandemic has expired, other immediate pressures still prohibit many from going to the doctor.

The physicians who spoke with The Hill cited issues like loss of employment, rising health care costs and health care worker burnout as contributing to people putting off important cancer screenings.

Debra Patt, executive vice president of Texas Oncology, said the health care system is grappling with nursing and tech shortages compounded by early retirements spurred by the pandemic. 

“What that means is that centers that are doing screening, mammography and colonoscopy and CAT scans, and screening CTs of the lung don’t have the same capacity as they did prior to the pandemic, and we are seeing some pent-up demand complicating that,” she said. 

These shortages contribute to longer wait times for screenings. Patt has heard from colleagues across the country that procedures like CAT scans, which used to take a week to arrange, are taking three to seven weeks.

With all these factors at play, physicians are concerned cancer mortality and severity will only go up in the next few years.

“I think that’s absolutely going to happen,” Patt said.

“What we saw during the pandemic — especially during times of high COVID — was that people had fear to reach their doctors, and so they just avoided what they thought was maybe an elective test. What’s happened since then is that people’s lives are getting in the way of their health care,” she added.

Even health-conscious individuals have been negligent in staying on top of screenings because of the pandemic. Patt recalls one patient she recently saw who was at high risk for breast cancer. The patient was in her 60s, felt a mass in her breast and has known for more than a decade that she has a BRCA gene mutation, which makes her more likely to develop breast cancer.

Despite feeling the mass and knowing of her genetic risk, the patient dragged her feet about going to the doctor because of changes in her life brought on by COVID, which caused her to move. Patt describes this situation as one of many “natural consequences” of the pandemic.

When she disclosed her breast cancer diagnosis last year, journalist and prominent cancer screening advocate Katie Couric, who describes herself as “vigilant, bordering on neurotic, about taking care of my health,” confessed she had not had a mammogram in nearly two years.

“How could that be? Had the pandemic given me a skewed sense of time? Had it messed with my memory?” Couric wrote in her blog.

Friends of Cancer Research CEO Jeff Allen told The Hill the U.S. could see an uptick in “multiple different cancer types” being diagnosed at more advanced stages due to the delay in screenings.

Combating this issue will require a multi-faceted approach that hits at funding issues, revising policies and raising public awareness.

Ezekiel Emanuel, oncologist and former White House adviser, told The Hill, “Waiting for people to show up is not going to work. Positive outreach is critically important.”

When the National Cancer Institute reported on the screening gap last year, it cited a handful of outreach methods that have garnered success. These included going over patient records and flagging those overdue for screenings, holding community luncheons and reaching out through social media.

Solving staffing shortages, which bog down how quickly patients can see providers, will require systemic reforms and targeted programs. Among nurses, enrollment numbers at nursing schools are not growing fast enough, and school faculty are also in short supply. On top of this, a freeze on visas for foreign nurses coming into the U.S. threatens to aggravate the scarcity.

In her state of Texas, Patt noted measures like loan repayment programs have been instituted to help the nursing shortage. She opined that state governments should champion policies that dedicate a portion of the state’s budget to addressing health care worker shortages.

Gordon said insurance companies must also get rid of red tape that deters people from getting screenings, such as prior authorization before getting a procedure.

Yet insurance coverage for preventive services like cancer screenings could soon become harder for people to access. A provision in the Affordable Care Act that ensures preventive service with cost sharing is currently being litigated in a federal lawsuit.

But physicians say more attention on the issue is a good place to start. 

“This is really a national problem,” Patt said. “I do think that heightening awareness will end up in better results for patients. I think it saves lives.”

Previous Post

Biden officials urge states to slow Medicaid cuts

Next Post

Record-high 69 percent in new poll say first-trimester abortion should be legal

Next Post
Record-high 69 percent in new poll say first-trimester abortion should be legal

Record-high 69 percent in new poll say first-trimester abortion should be legal

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Vaccine protection against COVID-19 related issues

Vaccine protection against COVID-19 related issues

April 26, 2022
2 in 3 physicians concerned about AI driving diagnosis, treatment decisions: Survey

2 in 3 physicians concerned about AI driving diagnosis, treatment decisions: Survey

October 31, 2023
Religious services may lower risk of ‘deaths of despair’

Religious services may lower risk of ‘deaths of despair’

April 26, 2022
Signaling molecule may prevent Alzheimer’s

Signaling molecule may prevent Alzheimer’s

April 26, 2022
Federal judge finds HHS mass layoffs likely unlawful

Federal judge finds HHS mass layoffs likely unlawful

0
7 Tips to Make Your Workout Routine More Sustainable

7 Tips to Make Your Workout Routine More Sustainable

0
11 Weight Loss Tips That Will Get you Fast Results

11 Weight Loss Tips That Will Get you Fast Results

0
What are the Sunday Scaries? Plus, Here’s How to Beat Them

What are the Sunday Scaries? Plus, Here’s How to Beat Them

0
Federal judge finds HHS mass layoffs likely unlawful

Federal judge finds HHS mass layoffs likely unlawful

July 1, 2025
Trump’s advice to ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ escapees: ‘Don’t run in a straight line’

Trump’s advice to ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ escapees: ‘Don’t run in a straight line’

July 1, 2025
Senate megabill marks biggest Medicaid cuts in history 

Senate megabill marks biggest Medicaid cuts in history 

July 1, 2025
Democratic states sue Trump administration over school mental health funding cuts

Democratic states sue Trump administration over school mental health funding cuts

July 1, 2025

Recent News

Federal judge finds HHS mass layoffs likely unlawful

Federal judge finds HHS mass layoffs likely unlawful

July 1, 2025
Trump’s advice to ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ escapees: ‘Don’t run in a straight line’

Trump’s advice to ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ escapees: ‘Don’t run in a straight line’

July 1, 2025
Senate megabill marks biggest Medicaid cuts in history 

Senate megabill marks biggest Medicaid cuts in history 

July 1, 2025
Democratic states sue Trump administration over school mental health funding cuts

Democratic states sue Trump administration over school mental health funding cuts

July 1, 2025
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Email Whitelisting

Disclaimer: Healthyfemalearmy.com, its managers, its employees, and assigns (collectively "The Company") do not make any guarantee or warranty about what is advertised above. Information provided by this website is for research purposes only and should not be considered as personalized beauty advice. The Company is not affiliated with, nor does it receive compensation from, any specific security. The Company is not registered or licensed by any governing body in any jurisdiction to give health advice or provide beauty recommendation. Any recommendations here should be taken into consideration only after consulting with your doctor.
© 2025 Healthyfemalearmy.com. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Contact Us
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Home 1
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Terms and Conditions

Disclaimer: Healthyfemalearmy.com, its managers, its employees, and assigns (collectively "The Company") do not make any guarantee or warranty about what is advertised above. Information provided by this website is for research purposes only and should not be considered as personalized beauty advice. The Company is not affiliated with, nor does it receive compensation from, any specific security. The Company is not registered or licensed by any governing body in any jurisdiction to give health advice or provide beauty recommendation. Any recommendations here should be taken into consideration only after consulting with your doctor.
© 2025 Healthyfemalearmy.com. All rights reserved.