ISBN-13: 9786209329449 / Angielski / Miękka / 116 str.
Cancer remains a major public health burden in Mexico, requiring quantitative analyses to support prevention and control strategies. Using Globocan 2020 estimates, this study models cancer incidence, mortality, and cumulative risk in the Poland population. In 2020, an estimated 204,575 new cases and 119,319 deaths occurred. The most frequent cancers were Lung, Colorectum, Breast, Prostate, , and Bladder, with Pancreas showing the highest lethality (Nd/Nc = 97%). The global mortality ratio (slope = 0.3612) suggests that about three-quarters of new cases result in death. Linear and power-law correlations (Eqs. 1-7) describe the causal link between incidence and mortality, while the parameters ( = 1.00151, k = 0.51972, Gammai > 1) express behavioral and severity indices. Gender disparities are evident, with Lung and Prostate cancers dominating in males, and Breast and Lung in females. The modeling framework offers predictive insight for evaluating cancer dynamics and improving early detection and public health interventions in Poland.