Red > 20.9 Green <= 17.9 In-between = Yellow Unit: deaths/100,000 population
View the Legend
|
Age-Adjusted Death Rate due to Colorectal Cancer
| Value: |
11.4 deaths/100,000 population |
Measurement Period: |
2005-2009 |
| Location: |
County : Montgomery |
| Comparison: |
U.S. Counties |
| Categories: |
Health / Cancer Health / Mortality Data
|
|
What is this Indicator?
This indicator shows the age-adjusted death rate per 100,000 population due to colorectal cancer. |
| Why this is important: Colorectal cancer--cancer of the colon or rectum--is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that if all adults aged 50 or older had regular screening tests for colon cancer, as many as 60% of the deaths from colorectal cancer could be prevented. While 90% of colorectal cancer cases occur in adults aged 50 or older, it is essential for individuals with risk factors (those with a family history of colorectal cancer, inflammatory bowel disease, or heavy alcohol use) to seek regular screening earlier. The Healthy People 2020 national health target is to reduce the colorectal cancer death rate to 14.5 deaths per 100,000 population. |
| Technical Note: The distribution is based on data from 2,198 U.S. counties and county equivalents. |
| Source: National Cancer Institute |
| URL of Source: http://www.cancer.gov |
| URL of Data: http://statecancerprofiles.cancer.gov/deathrates/deathrat... |
| Maintained By: Healthy Communities Institute |
|
Time Series Data
deaths/100,000 population
|
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Age-Adjusted Death Rate due to Colorectal Cancer by Gender
deaths/100,000 population
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Age-Adjusted Death Rate due to Colorectal Cancer by Race/Ethnicity
deaths/100,000 population
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Age-Adjusted Death Rate due to Colorectal Cancer
| Value: |
11.4 deaths/100,000 population |
Measurement Period: |
2005-2009 |
| Location: |
County : Montgomery |
| Comparison: |
Prior Value |
| Categories: |
Health / Cancer Health / Mortality Data
|
|
What is this Indicator?
This indicator shows the age-adjusted death rate per 100,000 population due to colorectal cancer. |
| Why this is important: Colorectal cancer--cancer of the colon or rectum--is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that if all adults aged 50 or older had regular screening tests for colon cancer, as many as 60% of the deaths from colorectal cancer could be prevented. While 90% of colorectal cancer cases occur in adults aged 50 or older, it is essential for individuals with risk factors (those with a family history of colorectal cancer, inflammatory bowel disease, or heavy alcohol use) to seek regular screening earlier. The Healthy People 2020 national health target is to reduce the colorectal cancer death rate to 14.5 deaths per 100,000 population. |
| Technical Note: The trend is a comparison between the most recent and previous measurement periods. Confidence intervals were taken into account in determining the direction of the trend. |
| Source: National Cancer Institute |
| URL of Source: http://www.cancer.gov |
| URL of Data: http://statecancerprofiles.cancer.gov/deathrates/deathrat... |
| Maintained By: Healthy Communities Institute |
|
Time Series Data
deaths/100,000 population
|
|
Age-Adjusted Death Rate due to Colorectal Cancer by Gender
deaths/100,000 population
|
|
Age-Adjusted Death Rate due to Colorectal Cancer by Race/Ethnicity
deaths/100,000 population
|
|
|
Age-Adjusted Death Rate due to Colorectal Cancer
| Value: |
11.4 deaths/100,000 population |
|
Healthy People 2020 Target:
|
14.5 deaths/100,000 population |
Measurement Period: |
2005-2009 |
| Location: |
County : Montgomery |
| Comparison: |
Healthy People 2020 Target |
| Categories: |
Health / Cancer Health / Mortality Data
|
|
What is this Indicator?
This indicator shows the age-adjusted death rate per 100,000 population due to colorectal cancer. |
| Why this is important: Colorectal cancer--cancer of the colon or rectum--is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that if all adults aged 50 or older had regular screening tests for colon cancer, as many as 60% of the deaths from colorectal cancer could be prevented. While 90% of colorectal cancer cases occur in adults aged 50 or older, it is essential for individuals with risk factors (those with a family history of colorectal cancer, inflammatory bowel disease, or heavy alcohol use) to seek regular screening earlier. The Healthy People 2020 national health target is to reduce the colorectal cancer death rate to 14.5 deaths per 100,000 population. |
| Source: National Cancer Institute |
| URL of Source: http://www.cancer.gov |
| URL of Data: http://statecancerprofiles.cancer.gov/deathrates/deathrat... |
| Maintained By: Healthy Communities Institute |
|
Time Series Data
deaths/100,000 population
|
|
Age-Adjusted Death Rate due to Colorectal Cancer by Gender
deaths/100,000 population
|
|
Age-Adjusted Death Rate due to Colorectal Cancer by Race/Ethnicity
deaths/100,000 population
|
|
|
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