Augie754
New Member
I threw together a excel spreadsheet of the risk for cigars and cigarettes from the cancer.gov website awhile back. If anyone would like a copy click the link.
Unless you know how to read these, it my be boring. You'd need to know what relative risk, confidence values, and confidence intervals are.
http://augie.dyndns.org/cigars/TobaccoHealthRisks.xls
Info was gathered from this document.
http://cancercontrol.cancer.gov/tcrb/monographs/9/m9_4.PDF
If you haven't read health studies, read this page first, so you know what the numbers mean! A 1.5 RR is a 50% increase, that sound high, but it doesn't mean that much statistically. Read the following to understand why.
http://www.davehitt.com/facts/epid.html - this site also has a lot of info on Second hand smoke.
Make sure you read about Relative Risk and CI (Confidence Intervals)
Unless you know how to read these, it my be boring. You'd need to know what relative risk, confidence values, and confidence intervals are.
http://augie.dyndns.org/cigars/TobaccoHealthRisks.xls
Info was gathered from this document.
http://cancercontrol.cancer.gov/tcrb/monographs/9/m9_4.PDF
If you haven't read health studies, read this page first, so you know what the numbers mean! A 1.5 RR is a 50% increase, that sound high, but it doesn't mean that much statistically. Read the following to understand why.
http://www.davehitt.com/facts/epid.html - this site also has a lot of info on Second hand smoke.
Make sure you read about Relative Risk and CI (Confidence Intervals)