Résumé :
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[BDSP. Notice produite par INIST aLbxgR0x. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. Background In recent years, mortality from lung cancer has increased rapidly in Korea, a South East Asian country with a high prevalence of smoking. The objectives of this study are to examine how age, period, and birth cohort effects contributed to trends in lung cancer mortality in Korea 1980-1994, and to predict lung cancer mortality rates for 1995-2004. Methods Age-and sex-specific lung cancer mortality rates were obtained from annual reports of the National Office of Statistics in Korea. Poisson regression models were used to estimate age, period and cohort effects. Results Among men, age-adjusted annual mortality rates from lung cancer (per 100 000) increased from 3.7 in 1980 to 17.8 in 1994 ; corresponding rates for women were 1.4 and 7.0. As age increased, mortality rates from lung cancer increased more rapidly in men than in women. Within the same age group, the mortality of younger cohorts was higher than older cohorts. The average annual number of lung cancer deaths projected for the years 2000-2004 among men and women will be 15 441 and 3572 respectively, while the average annual age-adjusted mortality rates from lung cancer (per 100 000) will be 65.4 for men and 15.1 for women. These rates correspond to 17.7-and 10.7-fold increases over the 1980 mortality rates in men and women, respectively. (...)
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