Women who quit smoking ‘live 10 years longer’

Women smokers can earn themselves 10 years of extra life by quitting before middle age, say scientists.

A study of 1.3 million women found that smoking tripled the chances of dying over nine years compared with non-smokers.

Most of the increased death rate resulted from smoking-related diseases such as lung cancer, chronic lung disease, heart disease or stroke.

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The risk rose steeply with the quantity of tobacco smoked, but even light smokers who consumed fewer than 10 cigarettes a day still doubled their likelihood of dying.

Smokers who kicked the habit around age 30 avoided 97 per cent of their excess risk of premature death, however.

The authors of the Million Women Study wrote in The Lancet medical journal: “Smokers lose at least 10 years of lifespan. Although the hazards of smoking until age 40 years and then stopping are substantial, the hazards of continuing are 10 times greater.”

Women aged 50 to 65 were enrolled into the study, designed to investigate links between health and lifestyle, from 1996 to 2001.

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Participants completed a questionnaire about living habits, medical and social factors and were re-surveyed three years later. Women were monitored for a total of 12 years on average, during which there were 66,000 deaths.

Initially, 20 per cent of the women were smokers, 28 per cent were ex-smokers, and 52 per cent had never smoked.

Those who still smoked at the three year re-survey were almost three times more likely than non-smokers to die over the next nine years.

Both the hazards of smoking and the benefits of quitting were greater than previous studies had suggested, said the researchers.

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Co-author Professor Sir Richard Peto, from Oxford University, said: “If women smoke like men, they die like men – but, whether they are men or women, smokers who stop before reaching middle age will on average gain about an extra 10 years of life.

“Both in the UK and in the USA, women born around 1940 were the first generation in which many smoked substantial numbers of cigarettes throughout adult life. Hence, only in the 21st century could we observe directly the full effects of prolonged smoking, and of prolonged cessation, on premature mortality among women.”

Professor Rachel Huxley, from the University of Minnesota, US, said: “In most of Europe and the USA, the popularity of smoking among young women reached its peak in the 1960s, decades later than for men.

“Hence, previous studies have underestimated the full eventual impact of smoking on mortality in women, simply because of the lengthy time lag between smoking uptake by young women and disease onset in middle and old age.”

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Jean King, Cancer Research UK’s director of tobacco policy, said: “The first studies examined the risks of smoking to men, but this research shows just how harmful it is for women too.

“Quitting at any age is the best thing any smoker can do for their health, and the earlier they quit the better.

“This study also illustrates how important it is to prevent girls and young women from taking up smoking in the first place. We know that packs designed to look like perfume bottles and those in pastel and feminine coloured packs are especially attractive to them.

“It’s for this reason we’re calling on the Government to remove the glitzy, distracting packaging and introduce plain, standardised packs.”

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