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			 The overall rate of deaths from cancer decreased from about 215 per 
			100,000 people in 1991 to about 169 per 100,000 people in 2011, 
			researchers found. 
 “Further reductions in cancer death rates can be accelerated by 
			applying existing cancer control knowledge across all segments of 
			the population, with an emphasis on those in the lowest 
			socioeconomic bracket and other disadvantaged populations,” write 
			Rebecca Siegel and her colleagues in CA: A Cancer Journal for 
			Clinicians.
 
 For the new report, the researchers compiled data from the National 
			Cancer Institute, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and 
			the National Center for Health Statistics.
 
 During the most recent years with data available, 2007 through 2011, 
			cancer cases decreased by 1.8 percent among men and remained steady 
			among women, they found.
 
 For those years, deaths from cancer also decreased by 1.8 percent 
			among men and fell by 1.4 percent among women.
 
			
			 
			Although the overall cancer death rate dropped over the past two 
			decades, the researchers also found that not all Americans benefited 
			equally. The decline in deaths varied from state to state.
 For example, declines in cancer deaths reached about 15 percent in 
			southern states, compared to drops of 20 percent or more in northern 
			states. Southern states also had the highest current cancer death 
			rates.
 
 “The large geographic variation in cancer death rates and trends 
			reflects differences in risk factor patterns, such as smoking and 
			obesity, as well as disparities in the national distribution of 
			poverty and access to health care, which have increased over time,” 
			the researchers write.
 
 Using the same data, the authors also estimate the number of cancer 
			cases and deaths for 2015.
 
 Overall, they estimate that about 1.7 million cancer cases and about 
			590,000 cancer deaths will occur in the U.S. during the coming year.
 
			
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			They predict prostate cancer will remain the most diagnosed cancer 
			among men and breast cancer the most diagnosed among women. Lung 
			cancer will be the second most diagnosed cancer among both sexes, 
			but will be the leading cause of cancer deaths for both sexes. 
			Among children ages one to 14 years, leukemia will be the most 
			diagnosed. For older children between ages 15 to 19 years, cancers 
			of the brain and nervous system will be most common, the researchers 
			say.
 In a statement emailed to Reuters Health, Dr. Steven Rosen, provost 
			and chief scientific officer at City of Hope, said people should be 
			vigilant for increasing cancer rates from a number of factors, 
			including obesity.
 
 “Recreational marijuana use can increase lung cancer and the rise of 
			sexually transmitted diseases is associated with cancer risk,” said 
			Rosen, who wasn’t involved in the new study. “In addition, cancer is 
			associated with aging, and as life expectancy fortunately increases, 
			cancer rates will rise proportionately.”
 
 SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1D66Cz4 
			CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, online December 30, 2014.
 
			[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			 
			
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