Women survive lung cancer better than men (Reuters)
1st Nov 2005, 21:07 GMT
Reuters - Women have a better survival rate than men in early stage lung cancers, regardless of treatment or even lack of treatment. The findings, from a nearly 10-year review of Medicare records, were presented here at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians.
Women survive lung cancer better than men (Reuters) related news:
- Women survive lung cancer better than men — Reuters: Health
- Surviving Lung Cancer: Advantage for Women? — WebMD Health Headlines
- Women with lung cancer tend to live longer than men, regardless of treatment — Medical News Today RSS/XML Feed
- CHEST: Women With Lung Cancer Live Longer Than Men — MedPage Today Hematology/Oncology
- Female cancer victims outlive men — Scotsman.com News - Cancer research
- Hot flushes distressing for breast cancer patients (Reuters) — Yahoo! News: Health News
- Hot flashes distressing for breast cancer patients (Reuters) — Yahoo! News: Health News
- Hot flashes distressing for breast cancer patients — Reuters: Health
- Radiation for cervical cancer impacts sex life (Reuters) — Yahoo! News: Health News
- Men with testicular cancer often become fathers — Reuters: Health
Latest news from Yahoo! News: Health News:
- Health care costs could jump 10 percent (AP)
- Results mixed on Merck's new painkiller (AP)
- More South Africans get AIDS medicine (AP)
- Europe to draw up strategy against obesity (AFP)
- Clinical Trials Update: Nov. 13, 2006 (HealthDay)
- Pharmacy Program Helps Elderly Take Their Meds (HealthDay)
- Red meat may raise breast cancer risk (AP)
- Insurers' plan aims to cover uninsured (AP)
- FDA: Tamiflu patients need monitoring (AP)
- Flu Drug Tamiflu May Cause Odd Behavior in Children (HealthDay)