Disease rate
increasing among women in Ireland
( Lung Cancer-November 10,
2003)
The rate of lung cancer
among women is rising in Ireland faster than anywhere else in Europe because
smoking is becoming increasingly a female habit here, the government's
cancer statistics authority reported October 14, 2003.
Dr. Harry Comber,
director of Ireland's National Cancer Registry, told a Dublin seminar on
patterns of cancer in Ireland that lung cancer cases among women had risen
3% each year since 1994. Cases among men were falling as quickly, he said,
as many males choose to kick the habit.
"Women are smoking more
and more," said Comber, who predicted that lung cancer would become more
common in Irish women than men within the next 10 years. Ireland "would be
the only country in Europe in which that was the case," he said.
Health Minister Michael
Martin, who addressed the same conference, said various forms of cancer were
responsible for a quarter of all deaths in Ireland, and lung cancer was the
biggest killer. He said the rising threat to women's health justified his
controversial plans to impose a ban on smoking in all public places,
including pubs, in January 2004. This article was prepared by Health &
Medicine Week editors from staff and other reports.
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