AOK warns of an impending increase in cancer as a result of the pandemic

Last year there were 16 percent fewer colon cancer operations than in the pre-pandemic period, reported the chairwoman of the AOK federal association.

AOK warns of an impending increase in cancer as a result of the pandemic

Last year there were 16 percent fewer colon cancer operations than in the pre-pandemic period, reported the chairwoman of the AOK federal association. The decline in preventive check-ups, especially for early cancer detection, is also particularly alarming: the data already available from 2022 shows that the number of preventive check-ups in the first half of the year, especially for cervical cancer and skin cancer, fell by eleven percent compared to 2019.

“So far, the number of check-ups has not returned to the old, pre-pandemic level,” said Reimann. Those who do not attend check-ups increase their risk of serious illnesses. "The later a disease is discovered, the more difficult the treatment often becomes," warned the head of the health insurance company.

According to Reimann, the evaluation of the insured person's data for 2022 shows an "alarming" trend overall: the total number of hospital treatments and check-ups continued to decrease after 2020 and 2021, even in the third year of the pandemic. "In terms of the total number of cases in hospital treatments, we had a 13 percent decrease in 2020 compared to the pre-pandemic year 2019, a year later the decrease was 14 percent. In 2022, hospital cases fell by 15 percent by November compared to 2019." This is worrying because people are probably not healthier than they used to be, said the chairwoman of the AOK federal association.

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