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Women
Benefit More Than
Men from Quitting Smoking
Excerpt
By
Linda Carroll,
Reuters Health
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - While
men and women both benefit from quitting smoking, women see bigger
improvements in lung function, a new study shows.
Researchers found that women's
breathing improved more than twice as much as men's after kicking
the habit, according to the study published in the American Journal
of Epidemiology.
Women may benefit from quitting
more than men because they seem to be more susceptible to damage
from cigarette smoking in the first place, according to Gail Weinmann,
director of the Airway Biology and Disease Program in the Division
of Lung Diseases at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute,
which sponsored the study.
"The message people should take
from this study is that it's never too late to quit," Weinmann
said in an interview with Reuters Health. "Quitting helps everyone."
For the multi-center study, researchers
led by John Connett of the University of Minnesota, in Minneapolis,
followed more than 5,300 middle-aged smokers for five years. All
the participants in the study had mild or moderate chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease (COPD).
COPD, which includes emphysema,
is a gradual, progressive disease that makes breathing increasingly
more difficult with time, Weinmann explained.
"Sometimes there is obstruction
in the lungs, sometimes it's in the airways," she added.
COPD is the fourth most common
cause of death in the United States. And smoking is the leading
cause of COPD.
During the course of the study,
611 men and 313 women permanently quit smoking. Another 916 men
and 592 women quit intermittently.
In the first year after quitting,
women's lung function improved more than twice that of the men's.
That difference leveled out some during the five years of the
study.
Compared to smokers, those who
quit lost less lung function during the course of the study. Women,
though, actually gained lung function during the five years of
study.
SOURCE: American Journal of Epidemiology
2003; 157:973-979.
Reference
Source 89
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