Kate Travis is the digital director at
Science News, where she has been an editor since 2011. She oversees editorial website operations and is a project manager for digital endeavors, including the 2019 redesign of the
Science News website. She has a bachelor s degree in journalism and master s in science journalism, both from Texas A&M University, and started her career in science journalism as deputy news editor, and later news editor, of the
Journal of the National Cancer Institute. She lived in Cambridge, England, for four years, where she was an editor for
Science s online career magazine,
Science Careers, and for a website devoted to careers in translational research. Kate was selected for the spring 2019 cohort of the Poynter Institute s Leadership Academy for Women in Digital Media.
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Diamond appears to be part of a trend.
While lung cancer typically affects longtime smokers, the number of never-smokers diagnosed with lung cancer is on the rise. In fact, 20 percent of people who die from lung cancer have never smoked, according to the American Cancer Society (ACS).
What’s more, lung cancer in never-smokers seems to be affecting a younger population.
“Lung cancer seems to be increasing in young people in their thirties and forties who have never smoked a day in their life,” says Michael Wert, MD, a pulmonary disease and critical care medicine doctor with the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in Columbus.