American Cancer Deaths Keep Falling
U.S. cancer deaths have continued to drop, a report says. The American Cancer Society releases a new report each year. Between 2004 and 2008, cancer death rates dropped 1.8% a year for men, the new report says. For women, the decline was 1.6% a year. Minority men had the largest declines in death rates among adults. Rates fell 2.4% a year for African-American men and 2.3% a year for Hispanic men. In all, death rate declines led to about 1 million fewer cancer deaths since the early 1990s, the report says. Among children, cancer death rates have fallen by more than half since 1975. But black men and women are still more likely than whites to get cancer and to die from it. New cases of some cancers also increased. They include cancers of the pancreas, liver, thyroid and kidney and some skin, head and neck cancers. The report appeared in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians.