NEW
YORK - Ex-smokers live longer than those
who haven't kicked the habit, no matter what age group you look at, according
to a new report.
"This
fact calls for effective smoking cessation programs that are likely to have
major preventive effects even for smokers aged 60 years and older," German
researchers write in Archives of Internal Medicine.
Their
report, which summarizes the findings of 17 earlier studies, is the first to
review the link between smoking and death in seniors in particular.
"Even
older people who smoked for a lifetime without negative health consequences
should be encouraged and supported to quit smoking," say the researchers,
led by Dr. Hermann Brenner of the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg.
They
found that smokers 60 years and older were 83 per cent more likely to die at
any given age compared with people who never smoked. While the link was weaker
in the oldest people, it remained considerable even in those aged 80 and over.
Smoking
researcher Dr. Prabhat Jha from St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto pointed to a
British study, for instance, that followed doctors for half a century and found
59 per cent of non-smokers were alive at age 80 compared to 26 per cent of
smokers.
In a
commentary accompanying the German analysis, Dr. Tai Hing Lam of the University
of Hong Kong said the findings show one in two elderly smokers will be killed
by tobacco.
"Most
smokers grossly underestimate their own risks," he wrote. "Many older
smokers misbelieve that they are too old to quit or too old to benefit from
quitting."
The
studies in the current review lasted anywhere from three to 50 years and had
anywhere between several hundred and more than 877,000 participants. All are
based on observations of differences between current, former and never-smokers
over time, which means there is no certainty that tobacco, itself, is
responsible for the difference in death rates.
But the
German researchers believe that's plausible because the chemicals in tobacco
are known to cause cell damage and people who smoke more have shorter lives
than those who smoke less.
Jha,
who heads the Center for Global Health Research at St. Michael's, said the new
report might overestimate the hazards of being a former smoker and
underestimate the benefits of quitting.
That's
because former smokers involved in the studies might have quit due to illness,
thereby increasing their chances of early death, Jha told Reuters Health by
email.
"Quitting
works at any age," he said, "but is especially effective if people
quit before disease."
According
to the British study of doctors, he said, those who quit before age 40 had
nearly the same death rates as those who never smoked.
Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment