State of the evidence: what is the connection between chemicals and breast cancer?

"Breast cancer rates have been climbing steadily in the United States and other industrialized countries since the 1940's. In 2002 in the United States alone, breast cancer struck an estimated 205,000 women and killed nearly 40,000. Billions of dollars have been spent in an effort to stem...

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Bibliographic Details
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: San Francisco 2003
Breast Cancer Fund and Breast Cancer Action
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19297214124910154969-State-of-the-evidence-what-is-.htm
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collection Library items
description "Breast cancer rates have been climbing steadily in the United States and other industrialized countries since the 1940's. In 2002 in the United States alone, breast cancer struck an estimated 205,000 women and killed nearly 40,000. Billions of dollars have been spent in an effort to stem this unrelenting tide; yet as many as 50 percent of breast cancer cases remain unexplained by the characteristics and risk factors associated with the disease. Ionizing radiation is the best established environmental cause of human breast cancer. Yet powerful scientific evidence points to some of the 85,000 synthetic chemicals in use today as responsible for many of the unexplained cases of cancer in general and potentially also of breast cancer. While scientists have not yet developed an ideal method for linking chemical exposures to breast cancer, several types of research provide strong evidence of the connection between chemicals and breast cancer. "
format TEXT
geographic USA
id 19297214124910154969_ef5994dc42d34790b0eef84107d9f028
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19297214124910154969_ef5994dc42d34790b0eef84107d9f028
is_hierarchy_title State of the evidence: what is the connection between chemicals and breast cancer?
language English
physical 44 p.
Paper
publishDate 2003
publisher San Francisco
Breast Cancer Fund and Breast Cancer Action
spellingShingle breast cancer
chemicals
ionising radiation
occupational risks
State of the evidence: what is the connection between chemicals and breast cancer?
title State of the evidence: what is the connection between chemicals and breast cancer?
topic breast cancer
chemicals
ionising radiation
occupational risks
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19297214124910154969-State-of-the-evidence-what-is-.htm