Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences; Volume 609 Trends in Cancer Mortality in Industrial Countries; Proceedings of the Workshop Held in Capri, Italy on October 21-22, 1989, by the Collegium Ramazzini and the Municipality of Capri and the International Week of Science, October 17-25, 1989
註釋 International trends in cancer mortality in France, West Germany, Italy, Japan, England and Wales, and the United States; Death from all cancers, trends in sixteen countries; Competing causes of death, a review of recent trends in mortality in industrialized countries with special reference to cancer; International study of time trends, some methodological considerations; Effect of changes in cancer classification and the accuracy of cancer death certificates on trends in cancer mortality; Accuracy of cause of death certification in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan; Cancer mortality trends analysis for Bologna and Province, programs, methodology, objectives, and early results; Multinational trends in cancer mortality rates, methodological issues and results; Lung cancer and smoking trends in the United States over the past 25 years; Changes in non-smoking related lung cancer with special reference to mortality trends in Swedish women; Lung cancer not attributable to smoking; Some notes in brain tumor epidemiology; Is brain cancer mortality increasing in industrial countries; International time trends for multiple myeloma; Multinational trends in multiple myeloma; Is exposure to benzene a cause of human multiple myeloma; International trends in cutaneous melanoma; Patterns of melanoma deaths in the United States; Lifestyles and trends in worldwide breast cancer rates; The Israeli breast cancer anomaly; Mortality trends for leukemia in selected countries; Analyses of changes in the ratios of male to female cancer mortality, a hypothesis generating exercise; Decline in death rates among asbestos insulation workers 1967-1986 associated with diminuation of work exposure to asbestos; Register epidemiology studies of recent cancer trends in selected workers; Cesium-137/Potassium-40 ratios in firewood ashes as a reflection of worldwide radioactive contamination of the environment; Plans for data base development network.