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In recent study, fewer colorectal cancer cases and deaths per 100,000 person-years were observed.
Factors associated with greater adherence include female sex, older age, Black race and higher educational level.
The inverse association did not differ with caregiving frequency or when stratified by age, race-ethnicity or depressive symptoms.
The findings show a 14% decreased colorectal cancer mortality over 14 years.
After 15 or more years since quitting, the cancer risk reached 50% of that associated with continued smoking.
The population-attributable risk estimates suggest that sodium above the recommended intake is linked to 10 to 30% of CVD mortality.
The chemicals already are illegal in the European Union and other places around the world.
The findings persist for men, women, white adults and those with college education when fully adjusting for other factors.
Age-standardized prevalence rates were higher among women than men, veterans than nonveterans and non-Hispanic whites.
Older age, white race, and higher education were patient factors associated with initial active surveillance uptake in an unadjusted analysis.