Cancer Deaths California, 2000-2003 This report presents data on California's cancer deaths for2000--2025

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The latest results of such an exercise, based on the most recent available international data, show that there were 10 million new cases, 6 million deaths, and 22 million people living with cancer in 2000.
In 2003, a total of 2,448,288 deaths occurred in the United States (Tables 1 and 2). The age-adjusted death rate (Tables 1 and 2), which takes the aging of the population into account, was 832.7 deaths per 100,000 U.S. standard population. Life expectancy at birth (Table 1) was 77.5 years.
So what is going on? Perhaps the most obvious explanation points to the role of obesity and metabolic syndrome, conditions which have been associated with driving cancer risk through increasing inflammation throughout the body and causing the dysregulation of key hormonal pathways.
Slightly more than half a million people will die from cancer (excluding non-melanoma skin cancer and carcinoma in situ except urinary bladder) in the United States during 2003. That is more than 1,500 people each day. Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the United States, exceeded only by heart disease.
A total of 1,368,030 new cancer cases and 563,700 deaths are expected in the United States in 2004. Incidence rates stabilized among men from 1995 through 2000 but continued to increase among females by 0.4% per year from 1987 through 2000.
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In the year 2003, we estimate that 1,334,100 new cases of cancer will be diagnosed, and 556,500 people will die from cancer in the United States. Age-adjusted cancer death rates declined in both males and females in the 1990s, though the magnitude of decline is substantially higher in males than in females.
Cancer is a major disease burden in California where approximately 180,000 new cases are diagnosed annually and an estimated 1.6 million Californians living today have had a cancer diagnosis.

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