Added to that will be cancers blamed on more affluent lifestyles — high tobacco and alcohol use, eating processed foods and not exercising enough. IARC director Christopher Wild said the focus should be on prevention. “The particularly heavy burden …
Added to that will be cancers blamed on more affluent lifestyles such as high tobacco and alcohol use, eating processed foods and not exercising enough. IARC Director Christopher Wild said the focus should be on prevention. He said: "The particularly …
"You know, we see affluent teenagers using it. We see superstars dying of this." The Dallas office of the Drug … "It's hard to tell people not to do it once they're doing it, because it's a lifestyle. It is how you survive day-to-day," Lamb said …
Because couples need two incomes to afford the same lifestyle that one used to buy. Because people who graduate from college cluster in neighborhoods away from those who don't. And because people want more from marriage nowadays. Among affluent …
These nations are already grappling with poverty-associated cancers caused by infection or disease, she said. Added to that will be cancers blamed on more affluent lifestyles — high tobacco and alcohol use, eating processed foods and not exercising …
The results will not be news to many Catholics, especially in affluent Western countries, but the blunt official admission of this wide gap between policy and practice is uncommon and bound to raise pressure on Pope Francis to introduce reforms …
… alone the HPV vaccine, and increasingly cancers associated with more affluent lifestyles “with increasing use of tobacco, consumption of alcohol and highly processed foods and lack of physical activity”, writes the World Health Organization …
The findings reveal a growing class gap in childhood obesity, and might indicate that parents and teens have gotten the message about diet and exercise, but it's much easier for affluent families to act on it. The calorie crusade. The study found that …
… nations are already grappling with poverty-associated cancers caused by infection or disease, she said. Added to that will be cancers blamed on more affluent lifestyles — high tobacco and alcohol use, eating processed foods and not exercising enough.