Mortality from smoking in developed countries, 1950-2000 : indirect estimates from national vital statistics

Bibliographic Information

Mortality from smoking in developed countries, 1950-2000 : indirect estimates from national vital statistics

Richard Peto ... [et al.]

(Oxford medical publications)

Oxford University Press, 1994

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

"Imperial Cancer Research Fund, World Health Organization."

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This reference provides tables and graphs for each major country that describe the extent to which smoking is now causing death in middle age and in old age. The chief purpose of this book is to facilitate effective communication of the magnitude of the number of deaths that smoking is now causing. In developed countries alone, the habit is currently responsible for about two million deaths a year, about half of which are deaths in middle age. There is, however, wide variation between one developed country and another in the current death rates from smoking, and in the trends in those death rates.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: the scale of the epidemic
  • Purpose of the monograph
  • Format of 51 sets of main tables and figures, one set per population
  • Format of 54 sets of appendix tables, one set per population
  • Methods, as described in original Lancet Report
  • Selected results
  • Contrasts between developed populations in smoking-attributed mortality, and in other mortality
  • Explanatory methods
  • Developing populations: future health effects on current smoking patterns
  • Main tables and figures for 51 populations.

by "Nielsen BookData"

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