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Few Cigarettes A Day Triples
Risk Of Heart Disease Death
Smokers who believe a few cigarettes a day don't do any harm will
need to think again.
Norwegian scientists who studied the health records of 43,000
men and women have shown that even light smoking -- less than
five cigarettes daily -- triples the risk of dying of heart disease
or lung cancer.
"In both sexes, smoking 1-4 cigarettes per day was associated
with a significantly higher risk of dying from ischaemic heart
disease and from all causes, and from lung cancer in women," said
Dr Aage Tverdal of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health in
Oslo.
The study was published in the journal Tobacco Control.
The researchers tracked the health and death records and smoking
habits of the men and women, who had been screened for heart disease
at the start of the study, from the 1970s to the 2002.
They found very little difference in the risk of dying from cancer,
apart from lung cancer. Men who were light smokers were about
three times more likely to die of lung cancer than non-smokers.
In women the risk rose to five times higher.
The dangers of smoking are well documented. Previous research
has shown that smokers die on average 10 years earlier than non-smokers
but stopping, even in middle age, can halve the risk.
It is also a risk factor for heart disease and stroke and raises
the odds of developing age-related macular degeneration which
is the leading cause of blindness in the elderly.
Tverdal and his colleague Dr Kjell Bjartveit, of the National
Health Screening Service in Oslo and a co-author of the study,
said health officials must emphasize more strongly that light
smokers are also endangering their health.
Reference
Source 89
September
21, 2005
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