Cancer Facts from the National Cancer Institute. Summary and bibliography on effects of secondhand smoke. Additional publications you can send for.
Summary of Swiss study published in the American Journal of Epidemiology that studied 1300 women.
Focus is on lung cancer caused by secondhand smoke.
The World Health Organization (WHO) sets the record straight: secondhand smoke causes lung cancer in non-smokers.
Over 700 references to the scientific literature. From the National Environmental Respiratory Center.
The largest review to date examined 50 studies on secondhand smoke, and concludes that secondhand smoke causes cancer of the lung, uterus, cervix, liver, and kidneys.
Paper in the British Medical Journal.
Long term smokers increase their spouses' risk of developing lung cancer by more than 20%, according to a new report.
Characterizes the risk and provides a bibliography of the research literature that establishes the risk.
Updated February 2000 to include latest research.
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