Barry I Graubard
As seen in:
Environmental Health Perspectives,
Nature,
Wiley Online Library,
Occupational and Environmental Medicine (OEM),
JAMA (The Journal of the American Medical Association),
JAMA Internal Medicine Author Interviews,
JAMA Network,
JAMA: Journal of the American Medical Association,
Medscape,
International Journal of Epidemiology
and
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Artificially Sweetened and Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Intake and Risk of Liver Cancer
Artificially Sweetened and Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Intake and Risk of Liver Cancer Supplement 1. eMethods. Systematic review methods eTable 1. Questions used to derive sugar sweetened-beverage intake and artificially sweetened beverage intake in each included cohort and last date of follow-up eTable 2. Search strategy used to conduct systematic literature review eTable 3. Mean artificially sweetened and sugar-sweetened beverage intake by HBV or HCV status in the PLCO eFigure 1.
Sociodemographic characteristics of populations living near industrial land disposals of known and suspected carcinogens across the United States
Abstract Industrial facilities dispose of millions of pounds of chemical waste in U.S.-based landfills, surface impoundments, and underground injection wells annually, but information on populations living in proximity to these releases is limited. We quantified on-site land disposals of known and suspected human carcinogens and evaluated population characteristics associated with disposals in the 50 U.S. states and Puerto Rico.
Etiologic heterogeneity across oral cavity cancers
INTRODUCTION Head and neck cancers have historically largely been attributed to smoking and alcohol use.
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