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Cancer mortality in the United States and Germany
Nikolaus Becker
,
Joshua E. Muscat
, Ernst L. Wynder
Department of Public Health Sciences
Division of Epidemiology
Penn State Cancer Institute
Cancer Institute, Cancer Control
Penn State Center for Research on Tobacco and Health
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
19
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Scopus citations
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Keyphrases
United States
100%
Cancer Mortality
100%
Germany
100%
Two-country
66%
Risk Factors
33%
Lifestyle Factors
33%
Time Trends
16%
Inconsistency
16%
Lung Cancer
16%
Screening Program
16%
Effective Screening
16%
Colorectal Cancer
16%
Prevalence Risk
16%
Cancer Incidence
16%
Second World War
16%
Living Conditions
16%
Standard of Living
16%
Increasing Prevalence
16%
Primary Prevention
16%
Cigarette Consumption
16%
Changes in Lifestyle
16%
Social Sciences
Germany
100%
USA
66%
German
33%
Living Standard
33%
Lung Cancer
33%
Second World War
33%
Cigarette Consumption
33%
Living Conditions
33%
Industrial Nation
33%
Nursing and Health Professions
Cancer Mortality
100%
Malignant Neoplasm
33%
Lung Cancer
16%
Cigarette Filter
16%
Prevalence
16%
Screening
16%
Rectum Cancer
16%
Primary Prevention
16%
Lifestyle Modification
16%
Medicine and Dentistry
Cancer Mortality
100%
Malignant Neoplasm
33%
Prevalence
16%
Screening
16%
Rectum Cancer
16%
Lung Cancer
16%
Lifestyle Modification
16%
Primary Prevention
16%
Psychology
Cigarette Consumption
100%