Mr Man 2nd December 2009 |
David Elliott Lewis, Ph.D. the reason you dont see countries from the 3rd world, like Africa, is because of at least two reasons.
First there life expectancy might be very low and cancer usually shows up in mid to late in life. So people die before cancer gets to them.
Secondly, and more importantly for a list like this is the ability to count the people with cancer. Cancer rates may be very high in an African country but if the people don't know they have it or can not report it due to lack of hospital facilities and/or possibly government interference. The poor souls can't be counted and thus will never show up on a list. |
Michael Z. Williamson 26th November 2009 |
5,350.7 deaths per 1.6 MILLION people--it's an additive property. You add the total of deaths AND the total ratio base.
This graph is very badly done and misleading. |
pearl jam 24th November 2009 |
AND WHITE PEOPLE ARE 100% MORE LIKELY TO DIE OF SKIN CANCER. PERIOD. |
David Elliott Lewis, Ph.D. 20th November 2009 |
I find it very strange that no countries from Africa, Latin America or Asia (except Japan) are on this list. Why is that? |
ec 15th November 2009 |
This is really great. |
Austin Fifield 29th October 2009 |
I need something that has asia not just the ones you gys like |
Sue 24th August 2009 |
I read the graph to indicate the number
of deaths. Fewer deaths in UK than
Norway thus the ranking. |
JDR 14th August 2009 |
How are you interpreting the OECD data?
These numbers differ from the OECD Health Data Frequently Requested Data available from their website which you site as the source.
http://www.irdes.fr/EcoSante/DownLoad/OECDHealthData_FrequentlyRequestedData.xls
|
StuRat 19th July 2009 |
Your graph is badly messed up:
1) Your numbers are backwards. That is, the UK should have the worst numbers, not the best.
2) Austria, for some reason, doesn't sort properly. Even though it's rank is 13th, it sorts out between 3 and 4 instead of 12 and 14.
Please fix it. |
Ian Graham Staff Editor 20th May 2005 |
African Americans are more likely to die from cancer than any other racial or ethnic group. Although cancer death rates are dropping among African Americans in the United States, the gap between blacks and whites remains large, according to the American Cancer Society. A new report estimates that there will be 137,910 new cases of cancer among African Americans in 2005, and 63,110 cancer deaths. The overall death rate from all cancers combined declined by 1.6 percent among African Americans each year between 1993 and 2001, which is greater than the 1 percent yearly decline seen among whites in the same period. However, lung cancer rates are 47% higher among African-American men than white men. The death rate from lung cancer is 36% higher than for white men. Lung cancer is expected to claim 15,500 lives among African Americans in 2005. Colon cancer rates are also higher among African Americans than whites. Colon cancer is the third-leading cause of cancer death among African-American men and women. It is expected to kill about 7,080 African Americans in 2005. Breast cancer is the most common cancer among African-American women, and the second leading cause of cancer death. About 19,240 new cases are expected this year. Breast cancer is actually less common among African-American women than white women, except in the case of women under 40. But African-American women are more likely to die from it. About 5,640 black women are expected to die of breast cancer this year. Prostate cancer rates are 60% higher in African-American men than white men and death rates are nearly two-and-a-half times higher. About 30,770 prostate cancer cases and 5,050 deaths are expected in 2005. |
Ian Graham Staff Editor 18th May 2005 |
Adult survivors of childhood cancers face an increased risk of suffering from health problems including heart disease, infertility and kidney disease, according to the Childhood Cancer Survivors Study. By the time they are 45, those who survived childhood cancer are four times as likely as cancer-free siblings to report severe health conditions. The study compared the health status of 10,397 survivors of childhood cancers diagnosed and treated between 1970 and 1986, with the health status of more than 3,034 healthy siblings. It found that survivors of Hodgkin’s lymphoma are 4.4 times more likely to have more than two serious medical conditions – such as a second malignant neoplasm, myocardial infarction (heart attack), coronary artery bypass surgery, heart transplant, end-stage kidney disease, or paralysis – than cancer-free siblings. Chest radiation and anthracycline-based chemotherapy treatments carried the highest risk for long-term complications. The median survival rate for childhood cancers in the United States is almost at 80%, but at least two-thirds of childhood cancer survivors develop chronic health conditions associated with cancer treatment and a third have serious, life-threatening conditions. |
Ian Graham Staff Editor 15th April 2005 |
The most commonly diagnosed non-skin cancer in the United States, prostate cancer will afflict one in six American men over the course of his lifetime and an American man is actually 33 percent more likely to develop prostate cancer than an American woman is to develop breast cancer. The Prostate Cancer Foundation says that over 232,000 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2005, and 30,000 men will die from it. It is estimated that there are over 2 million American men currently living with prostate cancer. In the United States, one new case of prostate cancer occurs every 2.5 minutes and a man dies from the disease every 17 minutes. The chance of developing prostate cancer increases rapidly after age 50. More than 70 percent of all prostate cancers are diagnosed in men over the age of 65. Prostate cancer is the second-leading cause (next to lung cancer) of cancer-related deaths among men in the U.S. African-American men are 65 percent more likely to be diagnosed with prostate cancer than Caucasian-Americans and are more than twice as likely to die from it. However, because prostate cancer is a relatively slow-growing cancer, the 5-year survival rate for prostate cancer diagnosed at all stages is 98%. The 10-year survival rate is 84% and the 15-year survival rate is 56%. |
Edria Murray Staff Editor 14th April 2005 |
In response to cindycooke: The prostate is part of the male reproductive system and is located just below the bladder. The function of the prostate is to produce some of the fluid for semen which transports sperm. Worldwide, more than 650,000 men are diagnosed with prostate cancer every year, accounting for a tenth of all new male cancers. Prostate cancer usually occurs in men over 70 years old with very few cases diagnosed in men under 50. Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in men after lung cancer. Unlike other cancers, lifestyle factors do not appear to considerably increase risk the main known risk factors are age, ethnicity and family history.The survival rate for prostate cancer patients has doubled over the last twenty-five years. The five-year survival rate is now 65% with higher survival rates if the cancer is detected early. National statistics on prostate cancer mortality can be found in the mortality category.The highest incidence rates are in the developed world and the lowest rates in Africa and Asia. This trend may not reflect actual incidence as the availability of screening tests is significantly higher in developed countries especially the United States. In addition to this, men in Africa and Asia have a lower probability of reaching age 65 so fewer men reach the age when prostate cancer is most likely to occur. |
Ian Graham Staff Editor 4th April 2005 |
A study published in the International Journal of Cancer, based on a comparison of 585 people with pancreatic and 4,779 people without the diseases, suggests that the risk of this particular cancer decreases as fruit and vegetable consumption increases. A large study of Canadians diagnosed with cancer between 1994 and 1997 found that eating more fresh fruit and cruciferous vegetables, such as broccoli and cauliflower, was associated with a lower risk of pancreatic cancer. However, the relationship between the two was confined to men. There was no clear association between diet and pancreatic cancer risk among women. Among cancers, pancreatic tumors have one of the lowest survival rates, with less than five percent of patients living for five years after being diagnosed. This is mainly because the disease is rarely caught early. |
Desiree Campbell 22nd November 2004 |
Do you have maps of lung cancer |