For U.S. Women, Lung Cancer Deaths Begin to Decline

The lung cancer death rate for U.S. women finally has begun to decline.

As the The Washington Post reports, new research shows that the rate peaked in 2002, followed by declines of about 1 percent annually through 2007, the last year for which statistics are available.

Lung cancer death rates remained stubbornly high longer for women than for men, whose rate began to decline more than a decade sooner. The reason experts gave for the gender gap was that females began smoking in large numbers later than men did, and they continued the habit after the number of men who were heavy smokers started to fall.

Among women, lung-cancer deaths “had a slow rise and now it’s finally starting to turn around,” said Brenda Edwards of the National Cancer Institute. The institute conducted the study with the American Cancer Society, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries.

The lung cancer data reflected a broader trend regarding cancer mortality; deaths from 10 of the top 15 cancers affecting women, and 11 of the 15 for men, declined over the same period. Overall, cancer death rates have been declining since the early 1990s.

Cancer experts pointed to various reasons for the improved results. Along with lower smoking rates, they cited more frequent use of screening procedures such as colonoscopies and mammograms.

“Basically, we can cure you of cancer if we catch it early and take it out,” David Cutler, a Harvard economist who studies the impact of tobacco, told the Post.

On a more discouraging note, however, the rate of childhood cancers, which included anyone below age  20, was up slightly.

As Reuters reports, the American Cancer Society estimates that there were 569,490 U.S. cancer deaths last year.

Separately, Reuters reported that a new study in the journal Epidemiology shows that U.S. smoking deaths, from cancer as well as from other smoking-related diseases, total more than a half-million annually.

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2 comments to “For U.S. Women, Lung Cancer Deaths Begin to Decline”

  1. Jeremy Engdahl-Johnson

    Healthcare Town Hall » Actuarial study anticipates, supports recent findings on lung cancer screening. http://www.healthcaretownhall.com/?p=3248

  2. copenhagenshnitzle

    cigs r good 4 everybody

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