When writing a scientific paper, look for the most credible sources. Science doesn’t show bias, but we humans tend to show bias. Beware of sites and articles that provide facts without proper scientific evidence. Avoid using information from such sites. You must be able to identify reliable sites so the data in your paper is credible.

Use sources that end in .gov (government sites), such as CDC.gov. They are reliable sources. You can also use sites ending in .edu. They can be deemed trustworthy, but sometimes the information is written by students rather than scientists. Always find out who the author of the article is before proceeding. Some .org and .com sites are credible, but you need to analyze the content to verify their authenticity. As you review a source, try to answer these questions:

Who authored the article?
Is this person a scientific expert in the species I’m researching?
What is the purpose of the article?
Does the article state facts that scientists can prove with evidence?
Are there opinions in the article?
How old is the article?
Do other credible sources support the statements in this article?
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Answer:

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Explanation:

Cancer is the name given to a collection of related diseases. Cancer is more than one type of disease. In cancer, as a result of genetic mutations, this regulatory process malfunctions, resulting in uncontrolled cell proliferation. CAD, Stroke, Respiratory illness, COPD are all diseases related to cancer. Inherited genetic mutations play a major role in about 5 to 10 percent of all cancers. There are many environmental pathogenic factors that can cause cancer. For example , Tar and Coal-Tar Pitch , Emissions , Secondhand Tobacco Smoke (Environmental Tobacco Smoke) , Arsenic , Soot , Asbestos , Wood Dust. When cancer cells break away from a tumor, they can travel to other parts of the body through the bloodstream or the lymph system. Cancer is hard to treat in later stages because it probably has already spread through out the body. The grade of a cancer depends on what the cells look like under a microscope. In general, a lower grade indicates a slower-growing cancer and a higher grade indicates a faster-growing one. Some examples of cancer treatments of cancer are, Surgery, Chemotherapy, Radiotherapy, Cancer drugs, Hormone therapy, Stem cell and bone marrow transplants, Targeted cancer drugs. A new treatment involving a photosensitising agent that makes cells more sensitive to light and, by doing so, causes cancer cells to be destroyed when a laser light is directed on a cancerous area. One challenge is, druggable genomic alterations are diverse and represent only small subsets of patients in certain tumor types, which limits testing their clinical impact in biomarker-driven clinical trials. Next-generation sequencing technologies are increasingly being implemented for molecular prescreening in clinical research, but issues regarding clinical interpretation of large genomic data make their wide clinical use difficult.