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5 min gūglešanas: http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/documentStore/d/b/e/dbe35e00/Sdbe35e00.pdfThe first and probably the best, method is to assume that the male and female age-specific death rates from lung, cancer observed among the ACS non-smokers in 1959-72 would have applied to the whole country in 1978 if no one had ever smoked, to work out how many U.S. lung cancer deaths would thereby have been predicted (-12,000), and, since there were actually some 95,000 lung cancer deaths in the United States in 1978, to ascribe the excess (-80,000-85,000 lung cancer deaths) to tobacco.
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