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“The possible Association of the Consumption of Alcohol with Excessive Mortality from Cancer”*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 August 2016

Arthur Newsholme
Affiliation:
Health of Brighton

Extract

Part II of Dr. Tatham's decennial supplement to the 55th report of the Registrar-General, published in 1897, contained extremely valuable statistics relating to the relative death-rates and what are known as the “comparative mortality figures” of men engaged in different occupations. These statistics dealt not only with deaths from all causes in conjunction, but also from certain diseases; and the latter figures throw important light upon the influence of occupation on the mortality, for instance, from tuberculosis and cancer.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Institute and Faculty of Actuaries 1904

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References

1 The Statistics of Cancer, Practitioner, April 1899, p. 379.Google Scholar
2 On the Comparative Experience among Assured Lives of Abstainers and, Non-Abstainers from Alcoholic Beverages, by Mr.Moore, R. M. (J.I.A., vol. xxxviii, p. 213).Google Scholar
3 64th Ann. Rep. of Registrar-General of England and Wales, p. lxii.Google Scholar
4 On the Alleged Increase of Cancer, by Geo. King, F.I.A., and A. Newsholme (Proc. Royal Soc., vol. liv, and J.I.A., vol. xxxvi, p. 120).Google Scholar