yes
no
try it and find out
Smoking does not necessarily cause lung cancer. It does however, increase the chances of getting it. There is no safe minimum, or maximum. To reduce your chances of lung cancer do not smoke at all.
If cancer runs in your immediate family - mother, father, siblings or grandparents, then your chances go up of you getting cancer. But, if your great grandfather or great grandmother had cancer and no one else has had it, and if there is no history of the cancer jumping generations.....your chances decrease.
well i am not sure about what might increase the chances of getting cervical cancer, but 30 women in the U.S.A. find out that they have cervical cancer everyday.
A person's chances of getting skin cancer can increase as a result of exposure to the sun due to the ultraviolet rays of the sun damaging the genetic material in the person's skin cells.
Ozone high in the atmosphere absorbs ultraviolet light, reducing the chances of sunburn, skin cancer and blindness.
No it will not.
No, it improves your chances of not getting cancer.
No. Sex does not cause cancer to spread.
Every individual's chances for breast cancer are different. Diet, exercise, and genetics all play a role in the chances for getting breast cancer. On average, every woman born has a one in eight chance of getting breast cancer.
No. The causes of cancer are problematical. We know that doing certain things can increase the chances of getting cancer. There are people that have smoked for 60 years or more and have no problems with cancer. Conversely people that have never smoked have contracted cancer.