Cancer deaths among Black men and women in the United States have declined during the past decade in the United States, a new American Cancer Society report says.
Cancer death rates are nearly 60 per cent higher for people in the United Kingdom’s most deprived areas compared the most ...
Cancer death rates are around 45 per cent higher for people living in the most deprived areas of Northern Ireland compared to the least deprived, a new report from Cancer Research UK has revealed.
Britain's poorest communities face worse delays in cancer care, later diagnosis, and are less likely to access cutting-edge treatments, leading to 28,400 deaths each year linked to deprivation, a ...
Research by Cancer Research UK found that about 28,400 cancer deaths each year are associated with deprivation.
Figures show there are around 630 extra cancer deaths in the north each year linked to socioeconomic inequality ...
Almost a tenth of all cancer diagnoses in Northern Ireland are linked to deprivation - many of these cases are caused by ...
The burden of cancer isn’t distributed evenly across the population, with health inequalities causing unfair differences in ...
CANCER death rates are almost 60 per cent higher for people living in the most deprived areas of the UK, research shows. This ...
There are huge disparities in cancer care across the UK, with new research showing cancer death rates are 60 per cent higher ...
Black individuals had a 2-fold risk of cancer death related to prostate, myeloma, and stomach cancers compared with White ...
The American Cancer Society (ACS) has released Cancer Statistics for African American and Black People, 2025. According to the report, the cancer mortality rate declined from 1991 to 2022 by 49% and ...
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