Cancer in Europe
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Scope
Cancer describes increased cancer cases due to exposures to environmental stressors from the Schiphol airport in the Netherlands.
Description
- media:Viser airport 2005.pdf
- Conclusion: The overall cancer incidence in the Schiphol area was similar to the national incidence. The moderately increased risk of hematological malignancies could not be explained by higher levels of ambient air pollution in the Schiphol area. This observation warrants further research, for example in a study with focus on substances in urban ambient air pollution, as similar findings were observed in Greater Amsterdam.
- ⇤--1:: . Hematological cancers are an unlikely disease to be caused by either air polluttion or noise. Therefore my conclusion is that the observed increases are probably just noise in the large group of analyses. Thus, this study produces no evidence of increased cancer near Schiphol. --Jouni 08:34, 13 March 2007 (EET) (type: truth; paradigms: science: attack)
- Conclusion: The overall cancer incidence in the Schiphol area was similar to the national incidence. The moderately increased risk of hematological malignancies could not be explained by higher levels of ambient air pollution in the Schiphol area. This observation warrants further research, for example in a study with focus on substances in urban ambient air pollution, as similar findings were observed in Greater Amsterdam.
References
Definition
Causality
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