Abstract
Recent literature on morbidity and mortality patterns, known risk factors, and related soclobehavloral characteristics of oral cancer have been examined. Despite variation in populations and methodologies, alcohol and tobacco were seen as the major independent etiologic agents; these effects were associated with age, sex, and religion-ethnicity. Other factors were suggested, but their correlation was le88 consistent: geographic location, race, socioeconomic status, nutrition, dental conditions, and concurrent diseases. Social and behavioral components may alter risk, stage of disease at diagnosis, treatment, or survival from oral cancer. The impact of soclobehavloral elements on the reduction of the incidence of and the mortality from the disease is an important area needing further investigation.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: