Finding our roots: early population-based cancer registration, 1925

In 1925, the American Public Health Association Committee on Control of Cancer presented the results of its 1924–1925 operations at the association's annual meeting. The Committee evaluated the issue of cancer surveillance, both active and passive, and concluded that the probity of the cancer i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of epidemiology 2021-12, Vol.64, p.23-25
1. Verfasser: Lilienfeld, David E.
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description In 1925, the American Public Health Association Committee on Control of Cancer presented the results of its 1924–1925 operations at the association's annual meeting. The Committee evaluated the issue of cancer surveillance, both active and passive, and concluded that the probity of the cancer incidence data, however useful it might be, was outweighed by the likely cost. The reasoning provided by the Committee suggests a sophisticated understanding of many aspects of cancer epidemiology often thought to be a post-World War II development. From the Committee's report, we see that modern cancer epidemiology appears to have started at least as early as the 1920s, and perhaps even earlier.
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subjects Cancer registration
Cancer surveillance
Ccc = Committee on cancer control
Epidemiologic methods. Abbreviations: Apha = American public health association
History of epidemiology
Humans
Neoplasms - epidemiology
Research Report
United States - epidemiology
USPHS = United States Public Health Service
title Finding our roots: early population-based cancer registration, 1925
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