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- Canadian Lung Association
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- Connexions
Volume 3, Number 5 - September 1978 Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical) Published: 1978
- Connexions
Volume 4, Number 5 - October 1979 - Nuclear Energy\Energie Nucleaire Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical) Published: 1979
- Connexions
Volume 5, Number 5 - January 1981 - Militarism/Militarisme Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical) Published: 1981
- The Hazards of Uranium Mining
Resource Type: Article Published: 1979 This leaflet summarizes Britich Columbia opposition to uranium mining.
- Lung Association and Canadian Thoracic Society begin building lung health research agenda for Canada
Sources News Release Resource Type: Article Published: 2009 Recognizing the need to position Canada as a global leader in the fight against lung disease, the Canadian Lung Association together with the Canadian Thoracic Society have launched the development of a national research agenda
- New Student Journalism Award for Excellence in Lung Cancer Reporting
Sources News Release Resource Type: Article Published: 2010 The Canadian Lung Association and Lung Cancer Canada, in partnership with the Global Lung Cancer Coalition (GLCC), are launching the first Canadian Lung Cancer Student Journalism Award to recognize excellence in student reporting on lung cancer.
- Radiation Safety Institute of Canada Comments on Latest Radon Findings by Health Canada .
Sources News Release Resource Type: Article Published: 2012 On the basis of radon tests in some 14,000 homes and buildings across Canada, Health Canada scientists have found that many more homes than expected from previous surveys have radon levels above Canadian public health guidelines.
- Uranium Mine and Mill Workers are Dying, and Nobody Will Take Responsibility
In the Southwest, poisoned uranium workers are still seeking justice Resource Type: Article Published: 2016 To talk to former uranium miners and their families is to talk about the dead and the dying. Brothers and sisters, coworkers and friends: a litany of names and diseases. Many were, as one worker put it, "ate up with cancer," while others died from various lung and kidney diseases.
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