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Smoking causes up to 40% of cancer deaths in the US... so why are cigarettes still sold by pharmacies?


Smoking

(NaturalNews) Once thought to be relatively harmless and pushed as a 'past time' of sorts even by the medical community, scientific studies have proved beyond a doubt that tobacco use – and smoking, in particular – poses major health risks to humans.

In fact, one of the most recent bodies of research, published online by JAMA Internal Medicine, found that the proportion of cancer deaths that are attributable to smoking cigarettes contributes to nearly 40 percent of deaths in some regions of the country.

The study found that there were higher percentages of cancer deaths from smoking, generally, in the South, where about 4 in 10 deaths of men were attributable to the habit.

Currently there are about 40 million adults who still smoke cigarettes in the United States, Medical News Today reported, citing the study. Also, smoking remains the most preventable cause of death from cancer and a host of other diseases, all of which have been linked to habit.

The South is the hardest hit region for smoking-related cancer deaths

In all, smoking cigarettes is responsible for an estimated 28.7 percent of all cancer deaths in the United States, in adults aged 35 and older in 2010. However, there are no state-by-state estimates, Medical News Today noted.

Key findings in the study include:

Joannie Lortet-Tieulent, M.Sc., of the American Cancer Society, Atlanta, and coauthors estimated the population-attributable fraction of cancer deaths due to cigarette smoking using relative risks for 12 smoking-related cancers and state-specific smoking prevalence data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System. The study included each U.S. state and the District of Columbia.

Specifically, the study found:

-- 167,133 deaths from cancer in the U.S. in 2014, or 28.6 percent of all cancer deaths, were caused by smoking cigarettes;

-- In males, the proportion of smoking-caused cancer deaths spanned a low of 21.8 percent in Utah to a high of 39.5 percent in Arkansas, but the rate was at least 30 percent in every state except Utah;

-- For males, the estimated portion of smoking-attributable deaths neared 40 percent in Arkansas (39.5 percent), Tennessee (38.5 percent), Louisiana (38.5 percent), Kentucky (38.2 percent), and West Virginia (38.2 percent);

-- In females, the proportion of smoking-caused cancer deaths ranged from 11.1 percent in Utah to 29 percent in Kentucky and was at least 20 percent in every state except Utah, California and Hawaii;

-- Many of the states with the highest percentages of smoking-caused cancer deaths were in the South, including nine of the top 10 states for men, and six of the top 10 states for women.

Race, socioeconomic status may also influence smoking habits

The authors of the study noted that the higher smoking-related cancer mortality rates in the South is probably due to the fact that, historically, more people have smoked throughout the region. That has prevailed in spite of weaker tobacco control policies and programs (plus much of the tobacco grown and sold in the U.S. comes from the South). The study found that some of the least restrictive public smoking policies and most affordable cigarette prices were in the South.

Southern states may also have higher smoking-caused cancer deaths in part because of disproportionately higher levels of low socioeconomic status (more poor people), which is often associated with higher incidences of smoking. In addition, the authors suggest that racial differences in smoking prevalence across the states could also be influencing smoking-related cancer death rates and percentages.

The authors say their study probably underestimates death that is attributable to tobacco use for several reasons, such as the fact that only 12 cancers were examined. In addition, they said self-reported data are usually known to underestimate smoking rates.

"Increasing tobacco control funding, implementing innovative new strategies, and strengthening tobacco control policies and programs, federally and in all states and localities, might further increase smoking cessation, decrease initiation and reduce the future burden of smoking-related cancers," the study concluded.

Sources:

MedicalNewsToday.com

JAMANetwork.com

StopSmoking.news

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