When you see clickbait headlines talk about rates increasing, you know the absolute value must be very low or they're be trumpeting the actual numbers rather than rates, much like most coverage of the recent pandemic.
Unsurprisingly, I found out you're about four times more likely to die in a car crash than to be diagnosed.
Also unsurprisingly, the research in the article is at cross purposes; if you're fat the risk is apparently very much higher, if you eat a diet that makes you fat but you somehow remain thin then the risk of getting the cancer is slightly lower, therefore the advice is to eat the diet that makes you fat, carb and fiber up to the max.
Finally the end of the article is the stereotypical clickbait "don't actually do anything, just feel anxious and raise awareness".
Unsurprisingly, I found out you're about four times more likely to die in a car crash than to be diagnosed.
Also unsurprisingly, the research in the article is at cross purposes; if you're fat the risk is apparently very much higher, if you eat a diet that makes you fat but you somehow remain thin then the risk of getting the cancer is slightly lower, therefore the advice is to eat the diet that makes you fat, carb and fiber up to the max.
Finally the end of the article is the stereotypical clickbait "don't actually do anything, just feel anxious and raise awareness".