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An international study found that air pollution leads to more cancer-related genetic changes than secondhand smoke.
Air pollution and herbal medicines could be behind lung cancer in non-smokers, study finds - Researchers say never-smokers ...
A new study looking into growing rates of lung cancer in people who have never smoked tobacco found that air pollution and ...
Exposure to air pollution, other contaminants and traditional herbal medicines may be contributing to the development of lung ...
A recent study reveals a direct link between air pollution and lung cancer, identifying increased DNA mutations in ...
Research from the NIH’s National Cancer Institute, an agency beleaguered by funding cuts and censorship, finds that ...
Lung cancer among never-smokers is rising worldwide. In one U.S. study of 12,000 lung cancer patients, the share of people who didn’t smoke rose from 8 to 15 percent over twenty years. A British ...
A new study reveals that air pollution, traditional herbal medicines and other environmental exposures are linked to genetic ...
Why are more and more non-smokers developing lung cancer? An international study published Wednesday in Nature believes the ...
Exposure to air pollution, other contaminants and traditional herbal medicines may be contributing to the development of lung cancer in people who have little or no history of smoking, a new study … ...
Less commonly, lung cancer can also be a result of air pollution — the addition of harmful substances into the air. In 2013, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) of the World ...
Scientists have long known that air pollution can be linked with an increased risk of lung cancer in people who never smoked, but new research describes one mechanism that might help explain how.