The lifetime risk of cancer for people born since 1960 is greater than 50 percent.
For people our age, cancer is no longer a rare shock; it is the expectation for about one out of every two.
If that makes your stomach tighten even a little, I want you to watch Cancer Decoded with me. You can reserve your spot to stream it at no cost.
Watch Cancer Decoded here
Cancer Decoded is a series by Jonathan Otto, an award-winning filmmaker and investigative health journalist.
He has spent years interviewing doctors, researchers, and survivors, all to try to answer one burning question:
If we live in the most advanced time in history, why are so many more people getting cancer?
And why are so many told there is nothing they could have done?
The part almost nobody explains
The World Health Organization states that
“Between 30% and 50% of cancer deaths could be prevented by modifying or avoiding key risk factors.” (World Health Organization)
Read that again. Not treated. Not delayed. Prevented.
This means cancer is tied to what we breathe, what we drink, what we eat, how much we move, the infections we carry, and the stress we live under.
At the same time, leading cancer centers estimate that only about five to ten percent of cancers are mainly driven by inherited genetic mutations. (Cancer.gov)
So for the vast majority of people, the story is not
“Your genes decided this before you were born.”
The real story sounds more like
“Your body has been trying to cope with a modern world it was never designed for.”
Let me give it to you straight:
Toxic exposures (like pollution, plastics, pesticides, heavy metals)
Ultra-processed food that fuels inflammation
Chronic stress that weakens your immune system
Silent infections and gut imbalances that go unchecked for years
Lifestyle shifts: too little movement, not enough sleep, not enough nutrients
You were probably never shown how much of this is in your control
or how many ways there are to support your body, even if you already have a diagnosis.
That is why I’m inviting you to Cancer Decoded.
Again, here is the link so you have it in front of you:
Save your access to Cancer Decoded