gmo

General Medicine: Open Access

ISSN - 2327-5146

Abstract

Gender and Age Analysis of Lung Cancer in Australia

Mochen Li, Raji Sundararajan

Aim: To analyze the distribution and trends of incidence and death rates among males and females along with the period, using the historical lung cancer data of Australia. The purpose is that, with the analysis of the selected age-groups, it can generate some inspiration for lung cancer prevention, as an inch of prevention is better than a mile of treatment.

Background: Cancer has become the second leading cause of morbidity and mortality around the world following the heart disease. Among the top five common cancers listed by the WHO, lung cancer has been the always No.1 cause of death among most countries. Although the lung cancer incidence rates in developed countries are relatively low (about 40 per 100,000 in average, among Australia, Canada, Denmark, England, Finland, France, and the United States), there are quite significant differences among different countries. It is of practical interest to study these in detail, and for that purpose, Australia, where in 2012, they smoked 21 Billion cigarettes, was chosen.

Result: Generally speaking, lung cancer incidence in Australia presented a decreasing trend in last few decades and it will keep stable for next few decades. From gender point, male incidence rate is keep decreasing slowly and female rate began to decrease after twenty-year increasing. Among all new diagnosed cases, 60-year old people have an increased percentage than before.

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