Resources
On this page you can find useful information about cancer clusters by the following categories:
General Cancer Resources
- The American Cancer Society
Provides information on cancer (including cancer clusters), research, and services. - CDC's Cancer Prevention and Control Program
Provides calculation and analysis of cancer incidence rates upon special request. - The National Institutes of Health's National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Conducts extensive cancer research activities and provides educational materials for the public.
Information on cancer and environmental exposures
NCI's Cancer Cluster Web site
Provides an extensive overview of cancer clusters, including facts about cancer, the environment, and heredity; methods used in investigating suspected cancer clusters; guidelines for reporting suspected cancer clusters; and a list of additional resources.Cancer and the Environment: What You Need to Know, What You Can Do
Published as a collaboration between the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences, this booklet addresses concerns about the connection between cancer and exposure to toxic substances in the environment. It contains information about which types of substances are either known to cause or likely to cause cancer, and what can be done to reduce exposures to them. It also explains how scientists discover which substances are likely to cause cancer. The booklet provides an extensive overview of environmental causes of or risk factors for cancer including lifestyle factors such as diet and physical inactivity, certain medical drugs, hormones, radiation, viruses, bacteria, and environmental chemicals that may be present in the air, water, food, and workplace.
The National Institutes of Health's National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
Provides information about environment-related diseases and health risks, such as electromagnetic fields and cancer.- Report on Carcinogens
Produced by NIEHS every other year, this report contains an extensive list of chemicals that cause cancer as well as many other toxicology reports
- Report on Carcinogens
CDC's National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Provide information about exposures in the workplace known or suspected to cause cancer. NIOSH also responds to requests from employers, union representatives, or employees to evaluate potentially hazardous working conditions, including suspected cancer clusters.
Tools
- State Cancer Profiles
- Environmental Public Health Tracking
- EPA My Environment site
- Cancer Cluster Communication Toolkit
- Page last reviewed: February 15, 2012
- Page last updated: December 18, 2013
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