IN
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Adult
Smokers: China, Selected European Countries, USA, India, 2002
(in % of total male and female population) |
Male |
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Female |
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| Note:
Latest available estimates. Sources: Mackay, Judith / Eriksen,
Michael (2002): The Tobacco Atlas. Geneva, The World Health
Organization (WHO), World Tables: Table A |
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According
to the most recent estimates by the World Health Organization, China
has one of the highest rates of smokers among its male population
- more than two thirds of the adult males are smokers. Only Russia
and some eastern European countries come close to this high prevalence
of smoking in China. In India, by comparison, the percentage of
smokers among adult males, is less than half of China. Only some
30 percent of the adult males are smoking in India.
In the European nations of Germany, France, and Spain around 40%
of the males are smoking - some 15% more than in the United States
of America. Only the United Kingdom and Finland have rates of male
smokers that are comparable with the USA. In Sweden, on the other
hand, less than 20% of the males are smoking.
The situation among females is completely different: In our selection
of countries, China and India have the lowest rates of female smokers
- only 3 to 5 percent. Female smokers are also rare in the Russian
Federation. Very high rates of female smokers, however, can be found
in Norway, Germany, and France - where roughly 30 percent of all
adult females are smoking. In the US the proportion of female smokers
is around 22 percent.
With these data we can predict a serious health crisis for China's
male population. As in Russia and Eastern Europe, smoking will become
the number one health problem for the male population in China -
with high rates of lung cancer, cardio-vascular diseases and other
smoking-related health problems.
The United States and India have a much lower risk of smoking-related
public health crises than China and most European countries. This
is a clear advantage for the development of the United States and
India, since these countries will save huge amounts of smoking-related
public health expenditures. According to estimates of the WHO, smoking
is one of the most cost-intensive public health risks. Source:http://www.china-europe-usa.com/level_4_data/hum/013_4.htm
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