Experiencing pain may increase the odds that cancer survivors will use cigarettes and cannabis, according to a recent study published by Wiley online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American ...
Greater pain intensity in cancer survivors correlates with increased cigarette, e-cigarette, and cannabis use, but decreased alcohol consumption. Chronic pain prevalence among cancer survivors is ...
Pain intensity linked to increased likelihood of using cigarettes, e-cigarettes, cannabis, lower likelihood of alcohol use. (HealthDay News) — Among cancer survivors, pain is associated with an ...
Researchers found an association between higher pain intensity in the past week and cannabis use in the past 30 days. New research suggests that cancer survivors experiencing pain are more likely to ...
More Americans now use marijuana than smoke cigarettes amid shifting perceptions of harm of the two substances, according to ...
"[It] works out to be almost seven hours of life lost per pack," says the lead author of the study For every cigarette an individual smokes, their life expectancy shrinks by 20 minutes overall, ...
Cigarette smoking, long-known for its adverse health effects and connection to lung cancers, is at its lowest usage across the United States since officials started tracking rates in 1990, according ...