Smoking Kills More Than Just the
Smoker
Many people who smoke are very aware of the consequences lung
cancer, mouth and throat cancers, bladder and liver cancer,
increased risk of infertility and poor circulation, and other
dangerous issues but are willing to take the risk, even knowing
that smoking kills more people every year than any other
preventable cause.
If someone wants to make this choice, that may be their right,
even though it is sad and tragic. However, what is truly sad is
the knowledge that their smoking kills more than just
themselves, it actually does quite a bit of harm and damage to
the people around them.
Its thought that a non-smoker living with a smoker inhales
about 15% of the same tobacco as the smoker; this means that
for every 10 cigarettes smoked, the non-smoker inhales the
equivalent of 1-1/2 cigarettes!
These passive smokers are especially prone to the dangerous
effects of smoking if they already have asthma, heart disease,
or in some other way are very sensitive.
Lung cancer is still one of the leading ways that smoking
kills. Between 1960 and 1990, deaths from lung cancer among
women have increased by more than 400%exceeding breast cancer
deaths in the mid-1980s. The American Cancer Society estimated
that in 1994, 64,300 women died from lung cancer and 44,300
died from breast cancer.
While most connect lung cancer to the habit, smoking kills both
the smoker and the non-smoker in more ways than just this.
Non-smokers who live with smokers are more likely to have
asthma and scarred lungs than those who live in a smoke-free
environment. Chronic bronchitis, pneumonia, and Chronic
Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases (COPD) are other ways that
smoking kills both the smoker and the non-smoker
alike.
Annually, exposure to secondhand smoke (or environmental
tobacco smoke) causes an estimated 3,000 deaths from lung
cancer among American adults. Scientific studies also link
secondhand smoke with heart disease, one of the more common
ways that smoking kills the smoker and non-smoker
alike.
Each year, more than 400,000 Americans die from cigarette
smoking. One in every five deaths in the United States is
smoking related. Every year, smoking kills more than 276,000
men and 142,000 women. Every year in the United States,
premature deaths from smoking rob more than five million years
from the potential lifespan of those who have died. This is yet
another way that non-smokers, even those not affected
health-wise by smoke, are hurt by the disease. If nothing else,
this means that these ones they love and care about are being
robbed of five million years; so yes, smoking kills more than
just the smoker. Its a habit that affects everyone, smoker or
not.
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