- Cancer Death Rates Fall One-Third in US Since 1990s as Prevention . . .
Cancer death rates in the U S have fallen by approximately one-third since the 1990s when adjusted for age, according to data cited in a new analysis of global cancer trends The decline represents a steady, year-over-year reduction that began in the early 1990s and continues across developed count
- U. S. Cancer Death Rate Has Fallen 33% Since 1991, Here’s Why
They estimate that the cancer death rate has dropped 33% since 1991 and that 3 8 million cancer deaths have been prevented from 1991 to 2020 From 2019 to 2020 they estimate that the cancer death
- Annual Report to the Nation: Cancer deaths continue to fall
Overall death rates from cancer declined steadily among both men and women from 2001 through 2022, even during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer
- Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer, featuring state . . .
For males, the decrease in 2020 rates, compared with the 4-year rates, was largest for melanoma (12%), colorectal cancer (11%), and laryngeal cancer (10%) and lowest for pancreatic cancer (1%) and brain cancer (3%; Tables 1 and 3)
- Mortality | Cancer Trends Progress Report
The rate of death from cancer in the United States continues to decline among both men and women, among all major racial and ethnic groups, and for the most common types of cancer, including lung, colorectal, breast, and prostate cancers
- US cancer death rate falls 33% since 1991, new report says | CNN
The US cancer death rate has fallen 33% since 1991, which corresponds to an estimated 3 8 million deaths averted, according to the report, published Thursday in CA: A Cancer Journal for
- US cancer death rate drops by 30% since 1991 - BBC
Death rates from cancer in the US have fallen by 32% over the three decades from 1991 to 2019, according to the American Cancer Society The decline is thanks to prevention, screening,
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