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Fact checked by Jennifer Klump Although a lot fewer people are smoking cigarettes, lung cancer is still the leading cause of ...
A recent study reveals a significant 89% decline in heart attack-related deaths in the US from 1970 to 2022, attributed to ...
Pulmonary rehabilitation using minimal equipment achieved roughly the same benefits as when done with treadmills and other ...
Lung cancer accounts for around 20% of cancer-related deaths, and smoking remains the leading cause, but early detection ...
As new research spotlights the obesity-cancer connection, experts warn we’ve underestimated just how much excess weight – and the complex biology behind it – can fuel the disease.
In 2021, more than half a million people in the region died from smoking-related diseases, an increase of 231,000 deaths from 1990, with men dying at a rate 10 times higher than women.
According to Chris Grottenhaler, CEO of True Health Diagnostics, more than 480,000 smoking-related deaths occur in the U.S. every year.
A report shows a steady decline in cancer-related deaths in the U.S. over the past 20 years, but an increase in diagnoses among women, especially those in racial minority and ethic groups.
Since the 1950s, when researchers first linked smoking to lung cancer, national smoking rates have dropped dramatically. In 1955, 56.9% of U.S. adults smoked.
International evidence shows these bans cut smoking, protect non-smokers, and don’t harm hospitality long-term. International ...
Youth drive smoking decline: Researchers found cigarette smoking is declining rapidly in the U.S., particularly among young adults, with national rates projected to fall below 5% by 2035.