as cases of liver disease rise significantly, the
canadian liver foundation is launching a nationwide
petition calling on education ministers in this country to include information about liver health in health curriculum documents.
here’s why.
in 2013, the canadian liver foundation sounded the alarm about an emerging health crisis. a decade later, the proportion of canadians impacted by liver disease has grown dramatically from one in 10 in 2013 to roughly one in four today, more than doubling.
this is not an adults-only disease.
non-2022年世界杯预选赛阿根廷 liver disease (nafld) is now the country’s most common form of liver disease, impacting nearly 25 per cent of all canadians, with one in five of those affected being children.
nafld exhibits few to no symptoms until it reaches advanced stages, meaning most people do not know they have the disease until it is too late. not only that, but liver cancer in canada is increasing, with death rates rising since the mid-1990s.
this is the silent killer we need to be talking about in canada.
stigma around liver disease leads to delays in medical care
for so long, liver complications have been tied to a stigma around alcohol and drug use, which meant most people assumed they wouldn’t be affected. while excessive drinking and drug use are associated with liver damage, these are not the only causes. stigma can lead to delays in seeking medical care, serious adverse health outcomes, and even bias or neglect from decision-makers.