| The societal burden of cancer is one of the major public health challenges of our time, yet that burden is not equally shared by all. Troubling disparities have been documented not only by racial/ethnic group but also by social class, insurance status, geography, and a host of other factors. Furthermore, such disparities represent the end result of a constellation of forces stemming from both within the health care system and outside of it. Many currently existing cancer disparities are preventable. To date, few publications capture the breadth and depth of the dimensions of cancer disparities from both the clinical and public health perspective.In this volume, we will broaden concepts of disparities beyond traditional race/ethnicity discussions to explore a more systematic analysis of how, where, and why disparities occur across the cancer continuum. We will also analyze the issue of social disparities with respect to certain major cancers, with emphasis on the particular role of socioeconomic position. This volume reflects the work of a number of experts in cancer disparities, led by members of the Executive Committee of the Program-in-Development for the Dana Farber/Harvard Cancer Center. In particular, this volume updates and expands an earlier 2005 monograph on the topic published in the journal "Cancer Causes and Control" (Nancy Krieger PhD, Editor). |
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Ray Tracing Gems: High-Quality and Real-Time Rendering with DXR and Other APIs
This book is a must-have for anyone serious about rendering in real time. With the announcement of new ray tracing APIs and hardware to support them, developers can easily create real-time applications with ray tracing as a core component. As ray tracing on the GPU becomes faster, it will play a more central role in real-time ... | | AsiaSim 2007: Asia Simulation Conference 2007, Seoul, Korea, October 10-12, 2007, ProceedingsThis book includes selected papers of the Asia Simulation Conference 2007, held in Seoul, Korea, October 10-12, 2007.
The 42 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 120 submissions; after the conference, the papers went through another round of revision. The papers are organized in topical sections on... | | |
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