The crisis-cancer cycle in the shadow of COVID-19: evidence from Turkey

WCRJ 2021; 8: e2106
DOI: 10.32113/wcrj_20219_2106

  Topic: Virus and cancer     Category:

Abstract

Objective: Determining the existence of the cycle between the economic crisis-unemployment-cancer and implementing appropriate policies for this is important in the fight against cancer, which is an important public health problem. Mass unemployment caused by the practices in the COVID-19 process is worrisome in this sense. The cost of policies that may prevent the unemployment process will be much cheaper than the costs of cancer screening, diagnosis, treatment, care, organ-life losses, production and labor losses.

Materials and Methods: Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) and Phillips-Perron (PP) Unit Root Tests, Engel-Granger, Johansen Cointegration Test, Granger Causality Test Over VAR Model.

Results: Unemployment and cancer incidence are not cointegrated in the long run, according to the research. A one-sided causality from unemployment to cancer incidence has been discovered in the short term. As a result, unemployment is a Granger cause of cancer.

Conclusions: The determination of unemployment as a cause of cancer incidence, implementation of emergency policies to prevent unemployment will reduce costs in fighting cancer. And it will prevent cancer cases caused by the increase in stress and anxiety caused by unemployment.

To cite this article

The crisis-cancer cycle in the shadow of COVID-19: evidence from Turkey

WCRJ 2021; 8: e2106
DOI: 10.32113/wcrj_20219_2106

Publication History

Submission date: 30 Apr 2021

Revised on: 15 Jun 2021

Accepted on: 28 Aug 2021

Published online: 29 Sep 2021