Cancer Mortality and Morbidity Patterns in the U.S. Population: An Interdisciplinary ApproachSpringer Science & Business Media, 28/12/2008 - 455 من الصفحات This book is the first of its kind to describe interdisciplinary approaches to biomedical studies. It views analyses of biomedical data sets, such as cancer morbidity and mortality, from a different and richer than classic epidemiological perspective by using mathematical modeling methods, including ones providing insights into probable mechanisms of human carcinogenesis. The book will be useful for many specialists, e.g., epidemiologists, oncologists, medical researchers, biologists, public health and environmental specialists, and specialists in mathematical modeling. Medical, biology and math undergraduates and postgraduates, as well as basic and applied researchers attempting to extend their studies in collaboration with other specialists in interdisciplinary teams, will find practical information here. Biomedical specialists could be interested in historical aspects of cancer treatment and prevention, mechanisms of carcinogenesis, cancer risk factors, cancer mortality and morbidity trends in the U.S. over a more than 50-year period, as well as specific features of cancer histotypes, and recent approaches to cancer prevention. Readers interested in analytic aspects can find information on existing and innovative approaches used in interdisciplinary studies such as stochastic process models, microsimulation of interventions, and empirical Bayes approaches. This book was written by authors with different backgrounds who teamed in an interdisciplinary group. Kenneth G. Manton, Ph.D. (Demography) is Research Professor of Demographic Studies at Duke University (Durham, NC). He was Head of the W.H.O. Collaborating Center for Research and Training in the Methods of Assessing Risk and Forecasting Health Status Trends. He has authored more than 450 peer-reviewed publications, including several books. Igor Akushevich, Ph.D. (Theoretical and Mathematical Physics), Center for Population Health and Aging at Duke University, authored more than 70 peer-reviewed publications. Julia Kravchenko, MD, Ph.D. (Internal Diseases, Biochemistry), Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center in the School of Medicine. She is author of more than 30 peer-reviewed publications. |
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النتائج 1-5 من 85
... Carcinoma : Behavioral Risks and Viral Hepatitis Infections . . . 290 7.3.4 Prostate Cancer : Screening Effects , Genetic Predisposition , or Something Else ?. 293 7.4 Squamous Cell Carcinomas and Adenocarcinomas : The Time Trends xiv ...
... carcinoma . Hippocrates believed that it was better to leave cancer alone because those who were treated did not survive as long as those untreated . He attributed cancer to an excess of black bile ( thought to be one of the body's four ...
... carcinoma in situ of any site except urinary bladder , and it does not include basal and squamous cell skin cancers ) . In 2008 , about 565,650 Americans are expected to die from cancer , approximately 1550 people a day ( Cancer Facts ...
... carcinoma does not indicate a major contribution of these alterations in tumor development (Meierhofer et al., 2006)]. While the functional significance of somatic mutations in the mtDNA has been debated vis-a`-vis their ''cause and ...
... carcinoma ( Brouland et al . , 2005 ) . 2.1.4 Cell - Cell Communication In the multicellular organism , homeostasis is regulated by three communication processes : ( 1 ) extracellular communication via hormones , growth factors , neu ...
المحتوى
1 | |
37 | |
Cancer Risk Factors | 88 |
Standard and Innovative Statistical Methods for Empirically Analyzing Cancer Morbidity and Mortality | 151 |
Stochastic Methods of Analysis | 190 |
US Cancer Morbidity and Mortality Trends | 217 |
Modeling AgePatterns of Cancer Histotypes | 247 |
Risk Factors Intervention | 313 |
Cancer Prevention | 351 |
Conclusion and Outlook | 393 |
Index | 445 |