1- Obesity is becoming more fatal than smoking as a cause of cancer. Obesity is associated with about 14 percent of cancer mortality in men and 20 percent in women, compared with 30 percent each for smoking. In some years, …
1- Obesity is becoming more fatal than smoking as a cause of cancer. Obesity is associated with about 14 percent of cancer mortality in men and 20 percent in women, compared with 30 percent each for smoking. In some years, …
1- A great percentage of families have no limits for children’s exposure to tobacco smoke. A study involving 1,770 parents and guardians in New York and New Jersey finds that in almost 50% of homes and more than 50% of …
3- In the 1980s, researchers focused on the quantity of fat that people ate as a probable cause of cancer, but it was not well accepted. Later, they talked about diets high in fruits and vegetables as a way to …
1- A great percentage of families have no limits for children’s exposure to tobacco smoke. A study involving 1,770 parents and guardians in New York and New Jersey finds that in almost 50% of homes and more than 50% of …
2- Researchers Sara Pyle and C. Keith Haddock, of the University of Missouri, interviewed parents and guardians at 15 pediatric departments in New York and New Jersey. They asked the parents to identify from a list what smoking restrictions were …