These include 46,000 heart attack deaths and 3,400
lung cancer deaths among nonsmokers who are exposed to secondhand smoke.
Not exact matches
Since 1972, the proportion of
deaths among women due to
lung cancer has increased from 10 % to 22 % — a figure backed up by the latest results from Statistik Austria.
«In view of the fact that
lung cancer has now overtaken breast
cancer as the commonest cause of
death from
cancer among women, that is alarming.
For instance,
among the six largest countries, although the actual numbers of female
deaths from
lung cancer will still be the highest in the UK in 2016 than in the other large countries (at 16,400), the rate per 100,000 women has started to fall (from 20.15 per 100,000 in 2013 to 19.37 predicted in 2016), while
death rates are still rising in the other countries.
The overall
death rate for
lung cancer among women is being driven by women in the UK and Poland, with predicted rates of 21 and 17 per 100,000 in the UK and Poland respectively.
The first, a cohort - analysis paper run by NIOSH, looked at all
deaths among the miners, from
lung cancer as well as other causes.
These rates are more than double those in Spain, which has a
lung cancer death rate
among women of just over eight per 100,000.
While
lung cancer is the leading cause of
cancer death and the second most commonly diagnosed
cancer in both men and women, a low survival rate makes it the number eight
cancer site represented
among survivors.
The most common causes of
deaths related to smoking
among people in prison were
lung cancer, heart disease, stroke, and chronic
lung disease.
However, rates continue to increase
among older women in many countries, indicating a need for more concentrated efforts to initiate or expand comprehensive tobacco control programs across the globe to curtail future tobacco - related
lung cancer deaths.
It found that
among 53,000 heavy smokers at high risk of
lung cancer, CT screening demonstrated a 20 percent reduction in
lung cancer deaths.
Lung cancer is the leading cause of
cancer death among both men and women.
Additionally, breast
cancer is still the most common
cancer among women in the United States and is the second leading cause of
cancer - related
deaths after
lung cancer.