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Freddie Bray

Researcher at International Agency for Research on Cancer

Publications -  452
Citations -  345102

Freddie Bray is an academic researcher from International Agency for Research on Cancer. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Population. The author has an hindex of 111, co-authored 402 publications receiving 262938 citations. Previous affiliations of Freddie Bray include University of Oslo.

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Patterns and trends in human papillomavirus-related diseases in Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia

TL;DR: While options for reducing the HPV-related disease burden are resource-dependent, universal HPV vaccination with enhanced screening would maximally reduce the burden of cervical cancer in the countries within the two regions.
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The cure of cancer: a European perspective.

TL;DR: The proportion of cured of all cancers combined is a useful general indicator of cancer control as it reflects progress in diagnosis and treatment, as well as success in the prevention of rapidly fatal cancers.
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Global burden of cutaneous melanoma attributable to ultraviolet radiation in 2012.

TL;DR: The number of cutaneous melanomas attributable to UVR worldwide quantified underline the need for public health action, an increasing awareness of melanoma and its risk factors, and the need to promote changes in behavior that decrease sun exposure at all ages.
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Trends in breast, ovarian and cervical cancer incidence in Mumbai, India over a 30-year period, 1976-2005: an age-period-cohort analysis

TL;DR: The changing risk profile in successive generations – improved education, higher socioeconomic status, later age at marriage and at first child, and lower parity – may in combination partially explain the diverging generational changes in breast and cervical cancer in Mumbai in the last decades.
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Associations between oral hygiene habits, diet, tobacco and alcohol and risk of oral cancer: A case-control study from India.

TL;DR: Good oral hygiene habits - as characterized by healthy gums, brushing more than once daily, use of toothpaste, annual dental check-ups, and a minimal number of missing teeth - can reduce the risk of oral cancer significantly.