Expanded lung cancer screening and smoking cessation programs could prevent tens of thousands of deaths, but systemic barriers and outdated criteria leave high-risk communities behind.
The South Korean film and theatre community mourns the loss of veteran actor Lee Moon Soo at the age of 76, who bravely ...
Victoria Stainton said she was 'floored' by her son Harrison's cancer diagnosis but the charity Young Lives vs Cancer was an 'absolute lifeline' ...
A newly highlighted study finds that diets high in rapidly digestible carbs (high-glycaemic index) may modestly raise lung ...
Lung cancer remains one of the most challenging diagnoses, but at St. Elizabeth Healthcare, new approaches to early detection ...
For decades, lung cancer has been associated with stigma, anxiety, and loss. Advances in screening, therapeutics, and ...
A team of scientists have developed a simple method for automated manufacturing of lung organoids which could revolutionize ...
After a huge medical bill, bankruptcy and a terminal cancer diagnosis, one woman told Newsweek the ACA law gave her a second ...
Radon, a naturally occurring radioactive gas found in homes across Canada, is the second-leading cause of lung cancer after ...
OPINION: Stanford Dr. Bryant Lin is both a patient and an advocate in yet another vexing health care problem: insurance ...
Less than 10 percent of heart and lung surgeons in the United States are women. At a recent conference, they vowed to change that.
Nearly 227,000 people will be diagnosed with lung cancer this year in the United States— a diagnosis that often comes too late, according to one Billings doctor.