Philippe Bergerot calls for strengthening cancer prevention at local level

In an op-ed in Le Monde, Philippe Bergerot, president of the Ligue contre le cancer, criticizes the state's focus on curative care and advocates for local action in prevention ahead of municipal elections and World Cancer Day on February 4.

Philippe Bergerot, president of the Ligue contre le cancer, publishes an op-ed in Le Monde to highlight shortcomings in France's public health policy. On the occasion of World Cancer Day, February 4, the usual speeches will spotlight medical advances: six out of ten cancers are now treatable, twelve times more than a century ago. Yet Bergerot stresses the need to go further by focusing on prevention, which could avoid nearly 40 percent of cases diagnosed annually.

According to the Institut national du cancer, 430,000 new cancers were identified in 2023, about 170,000 of which could have been prevented. The author denounces neglected collective responsibility, where individual choices are shaped by an imposed environment. Instead of guilt-inducing injunctions like 'stop smoking,' 'exercise,' or 'eat organic,' which widen life expectancy gaps between the precarious and the affluent, he calls for concrete actions.

Bergerot faults the state for its inertia and short-term vision, prioritizing curative over preventive care. He views municipalities as the ideal scale for organizing this fight, especially ahead of municipal elections. This approach would allow planning tomorrow's health today, exposing current system weaknesses.

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A realistic photo illustrating a critical judicial ruling on France's 2020 COVID-19 response, featuring a massive document in a courtroom setting with pandemic symbols.
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Judicial document criticizes French government's COVID-19 management in 2020

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A 1,482-page ruling issued on July 7 by France's Cour de justice de la République grants non-lieu to Agnès Buzyn, Edouard Philippe, and Olivier Véran, but highlights grave shortcomings in the COVID-19 crisis management from January to July 2020. The magistrates identify a lack of anticipation, structural dysfunctions, and errors that could have prevented many of the 32,000 deaths. This merciless document could mark the history of France's pandemic response.

A coalition of 24 non-governmental organizations and unions, led by the Nos services publics collective, launched a campaign on January 30 in Lille to urge candidates in the March 2026 municipal elections. The initiative aims to bring the defense of local public services into the debate, vital for social cohesion. The platform outlines 14 demands spanning areas such as housing, health, and education.

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Gilles Bourdouleix, mayor of Cholet since 1995, announced on January 16 his bid for a sixth term in the municipal elections. Convicted on January 29 for the fatal fireworks accident on July 14, 2022, he faces an unusually hostile environment with seven competing lists. One of them is led by former deputies aiming to replace him.

Health Minister Stéphanie Rist, the Renaissance candidate, led the first round of the partial legislative election in Loiret's 1st constituency, with around 34% of the votes according to sources. She outpolled Rassemblement National's Tiffanie Rabault and Socialist Ghislaine Kounowski. The second round is set for January 25.

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In a tribune for Le Monde, historian François-Xavier Petit argues that France's public discourse remains anchored in 1945, while the world has radically changed with the Anthropocene. He contends that the first defeat of this era is not climate change itself, but our inability to rethink a happy life beyond outdated modernization paradigms.

A collective of about 100 health professionals held a white march on December 12 in Pointe-à-Pitre to pay homage to Jean-Michel Gal, a 67-year-old psychiatrist killed by a patient on December 1 at the medical-psychological center in Le Gosier. Dressed in white, the protesters demanded more resources to combat insecurity in psychiatry, denouncing unsuitable working conditions. A delegation was received by the Regional Health Agency to discuss improvements.

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In an interview with Le Monde, political science professor Carole Bachelot reviews 2025, marked by the fragility of successive governments, lengthy budget negotiations, and the incarceration of a former president. She attributes the instability less to a conflictual culture than to the centrality of the presidential election. The expert assesses the situation of the Macron camp, the right, and the left amid debates over the 2026 budget.

 

 

 

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