Cancer Deaths Risks Identified
Reported November 18, 2005
(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- More than one-third of cancer deaths worldwide are caused
by nine identifiable risk factors, according to new research based on data from
2001.
Researchers from Harvard School of Public Health in Boston found risk factors
include: overweight/obesity status; low fruit and vegetable intake, physical
inactivity, smoking, alcohol, unsafe sex, urban air pollution, indoor smoke from
household use of coal, and contaminated injections in health care settings. In
low and middle-income countries, the three leading risk factors were smoking,
alcohol use, and low fruit and vegetable intake. In high-income countries,
leading factors were smoking, alcohol use, and being overweight or obesity.
Study investigators say, "Primary prevention through lifestyle and environmental
interventions remains the main route for reducing the global cancer burden. If
implemented, reduction of exposure to well-known behavioral and environmental
risk factors would prevent a substantial proportion of deaths from cancer."
SOURCE: The Lancet, 2005;366:1784-1793
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