Status of breast cancer patients in China

Breast cancer surgery has undergone over 100 years of change, ranging from breast cancer root surgery (the removal of all and chest muscles and thoracic muscles) to breast cancer improvement and breast muscle preservation, to breast-pumping, with the concept of surgery evolving from maximum impurability to minimal effective excision. With advances in science and technology, the treatment of breast cancer has changed from the largest acceptable treatment in the past to the smallest equivalent, with breast-pumping and forward lymphosis as one of the directions of mammography. The rate of breast-milk protection abroad can reach 50-60 per cent and even 70 per cent in some countries, although many factors are involved. Our statistics show that in large, general, teaching or specialized hospitals, breast-feeding can reach 40 per cent, or even 50 per cent. The average municipal or smaller hospital is less than 10 per cent, in single digits, and the overall national level is about 20 per cent, so there is considerable room for improvement. Breast-painting does not affect the efficacy of the treatment, and breast-painting combined treatment is even better than breast-cutting. This raises the issue of the idea of inculcating in doctors the idea that breast-milk surgery does not affect the efficacy of the treatment and that the patient ‘ s body is more beautiful, as well as the need to educate the patient so that he or she can have better access to breast-milk surgery. It is a pity that those who are fit to keep their breasts cut off their breasts. A person ‘ s beauty is a symmetry. If one breast is removed, the breast is no longer symmetrical and only one breast is left, it has a certain impact on the patient ‘ s psychological, family and social activities, and even on the body itself, for example, if it is long enough to cause spinal bends. People who are fit to breastfeed must find a way to breastfeed. That is the current situation and direction of our efforts. There is a need to further increase the breast-feeding rate, as well as for patient education, training of doctors and the development of disciplines. There is a need to build a discipline, to develop a good pathology assessment, to improve post-operative treatment facilities and to create a team that works in harmony.