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THE NEWS
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Release - Thursday,
May 27, 2004, Contact: HHS Press Office, (202) 690-6343 |
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New
Surgeon General's Report Expands List of Diseases Caused by Smoking
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U.S. Surgeon General
Richard H. Carmona today released a new comprehensive report on
smoking and health, revealing for the first time that smoking causes
diseases in nearly every organ of the body. Published 40 years after
the surgeon general's first report on smoking -- which concluded
that smoking was a definite cause of three serious diseases -- this
newest report finds that cigarette smoking is conclusively linked
to diseases such as leukemia, cataracts, pneumonia and cancers of
the cervix, kidney, pancreas and stomach.
"We've known for decades
that smoking is bad for your health, but this report shows that
it's even worse than we knew," Dr. Carmona said. "The
toxins from cigarette smoke go everywhere the blood flows. I'm hoping
this new information will help motivate people to quit smoking and
convince young people not to start in the first place."
According to the report, smoking
kills an estimated 440,000 Americans each year. On average, men
who smoke cut their lives short by 13.2 years, and female smokers
lose 14.5 years. The economic toll exceeds $157 billion each year
in the United States -- $75 billion in direct medical costs and
$82 billion in lost productivity.
"We need to cut smoking
in this country and around the world," HHS Secretary Tommy
G. Thompson said. "Smoking is the leading preventable cause
of death and disease, costing us too many lives, too many dollars
and too many tears. If we are going to be serious about improving
health and preventing disease we must continue to drive down tobacco
use. And we must prevent our youth from taking up this dangerous
habit."
In 1964, the Surgeon General’s
report announced medical research showing that smoking was a definite
cause of cancers of the lung and larynx (voice box) in men and chronic
bronchitis in both men and women. Later reports concluded that smoking
causes a number of other diseases such as cancers of the bladder,
esophagus, mouth and throat; cardiovascular diseases; and reproductive
effects. Today’s new report, The Health Consequences of Smoking:
A Report of the Surgeon General, expands the list of illness and
conditions linked to smoking. The new illnesses and diseases are
cataracts, pneumonia, acute myeloid leukemia, abdominal aortic aneurysm,
stomach cancer, pancreatic cancer, cervical cancer, kidney cancer
and periodontitis.
Statistics indicate that more
than 12 million Americans have died from smoking since the 1964
report of the surgeon general, and another 25 million Americans
alive today will most likely die of a smoking-related illness.
The report's release comes
in advance of World No Tobacco Day, an annual event on May
31 that focuses global attention on the health hazards of tobacco
use. The goals of World No Tobacco Day are to raise awareness
about the dangers of tobacco use, encourage people not to use tobacco,
motivate users to quit and encourage countries to implement comprehensive
tobacco control programs.
The report concludes that
smoking reduces the overall health of smokers, contributing to such
conditions as hip fractures, complications from diabetes, increased
wound infections following surgery, and a wide range of reproductive
complications. For every premature death caused each year by smoking,
there are at least 20 smokers living with a serious smoking-related
illness.
Another major conclusion,
consistent with recent findings of other scientific studies, is
that smoking so-called low-tar or low-nicotine cigarettes does not
offer a heath benefit over smoking regular or "full-flavor"
cigarettes.
"There is no safe cigarette,
whether it is called 'light,' ultra-light,' or any other name,"
Dr. Carmona said. "The science is clear: the only way to avoid
the health hazards of smoking is to quit completely or to never
start smoking."
The report concludes that
quitting smoking has immediate and long-term benefits, reducing
risks for diseases caused by smoking and improving health in general.
"Within minutes and hours after smokers inhale that last cigarette,
their bodies begin a series of changes that continue for years,"
Dr. Carmona said. "Among these health improvements are a drop
in heart rate, improved circulation, and reduced risk of heart attack,
lung cancer and stroke. By quitting smoking today a smoker can assure
a healthier tomorrow."
Dr. Carmona said it is never
too late to stop smoking. Quitting smoking at age 65 or older reduces
by nearly 50 percent a person's risk of dying of a smoking-related
disease.
In addition to the 960-page
printed report, The Health Consequences of Smoking, the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services released a new interactive
scientific database of more than 1,600 key articles cited in the
report, available through the Internet (www.surgeongeneral.gov).
The database can be used to find detailed information on the specific
health effects of smoking as well as to develop customized analyses,
tables and figures.
The database will be continually
updated as new critical studies are published, allowing the surgeon
general to determine on a regular basis whether the evidence supports
a new definitive conclusion about smoking-caused disease. "Using
this technology, once a threshold of danger is met, we can quickly
alert the American people of new information related to smoking,"
Dr. Carmona said.
The report found that for
a number of diseases and conditions associated with smoking, the
evidence is not yet conclusive to establish a causal link. For these
illnesses, which include colorectal cancer, liver cancer, prostate
cancer, and erectile dysfunction in men, additional studies are
needed to reach the threshold of evidence required by the Surgeon
General's strict causal criteria to declare that they are causally
related to smoking. These criteria were introduced in the 1964 report
and have been updated in the 2004 report using new uniform standards.
For breast cancer, the evidence
suggests that there is no causal relationship overall to smoking.
However, the report notes that on a genetic basis, some women may
be at increased risk if they smoke. More research is required to
clarify the role of smoking in the cause and progression of breast
cancer.
To help communicate the report
findings as widely as possible, Surgeon General Carmona also unveiled
a new animated Web site for the public showing the hazards of smoking
and the benefits of quitting (www.surgeongeneral.gov).
In addition, a full-color, easy-to-read summary of the report has
been developed for the public.
"The Web site and public
summary of the smoking report are something that I am really proud
of," Dr. Carmona said. "By preparing materials that people
who don't have a medical degree can understand we effectively bring
the science to people in a way they can use. Improving the health
literacy of Americans by closing the gap between what health professionals
know and the public understands will have a lasting positive health
impact."
Copies of the full The Health Consequences of
Smoking: A Report of the Surgeon General and related materials
are available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
Office on Smoking and Health, 1-800-CDC-1311, www.cdc.gov/tobacco
and on the surgeon general's Web site at www.surgeongeneral.gov.
###
Note: All HHS press releases, fact sheets and other
press materials are available at http://www.hhs.gov/news.
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