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Cancer mortality rates declined nearly 3% between 1991 and 1995
In 1996, the American Cancer Society reported that the overall age-adjusted cancer mortality rate declined in each succeeding year from 1990 to 1995 for a total reduction of about 3.1%. This was the first sustained decline since national record keeping was instituted in the 1930s.
A major reduction occurred in lung carcinoma, which declined by 3.9%. Other smoking-related cancers declined by about 2%. The 5-year case fatality declined by approximately 0.5% per year from 1950–1954 to 1986–1991 for forms of cancer for which lead-time bias could be largely excluded.
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Source: American Cancer Society Journals
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