Anyone know the life expectancy stats for ex smokers?
Anyone know the life expectancy stats for ex smokers?
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Discussion

Tiggsy

Original Poster:

10,261 posts

268 months

Saturday 15th August 2009
quotequote all
Curious......if you smoke from 15 to 35, in otherwords... A very long time but still stop long before old age, what happens to your odds of a smoking related death? Just heard of a chap with lung cancer at 60 having quit at 45 and it prompted mrs t to ask if her quiting at 30 a few years ago may well have been (statisticly) too late. I said nonsense but actually.....20 yrs of puffing can't do you much good?

grumbledoak

32,166 posts

249 months

Saturday 15th August 2009
quotequote all
I believe the risks drop quite quickly. Risk of cardiac arrest is lower 20 mins after your last cigarette, IIRC, and I think you are 'normal risk' within five years or so. You won't ever undo the damage, but everyone comes into contact with carcinogens, whether they smoke or not.

5unny

4,395 posts

198 months

Sunday 16th August 2009
quotequote all
The risk of death from coronary heart disease returns to that of your average non smoker within 5 years.

The risk of death from respiritory disease - 20 years.

The risk of death from lung cancer - 30 years.

Obviously the risk is reducing year by year but the above are the figures at which point you are at the same level of risk as 'never smokers'


Source - "Smoking and Smoking Cessation in Relation to Mortality in Women."
Stacey A. Kenfield; Meir J. Stampfer; Bernard A. Rosner; Graham A. Colditz
JAMA. 2008;299(17):2037-2047.
Vol. 299 No. 17, May 7, 2008


You can read a summary of it here -

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/106562.ph...