|
Study: Smoking harms women more
than men
Amsterdam -
Cigarette smoking is more harmful to women than to men, cutting more
than a decade off female smokers' life expectancy but much less for
their male peers, Dutch government research suggested Monday.
Statistics agency CBS said a
comparison of the numbers of Dutch who died of lung cancer in 2003 and
smoking trends showed the habit cut a Dutch woman's life expectancy by
11 years, versus three for a man.
"Women who died from lung cancer were
younger than men who died from the same cause. This means the harmful
effects of smoking are more serious for women than for men," it said,
but did not suggest a reason for the difference.
Cigarette smoking is believed to be
one of the main causes of lung cancer as well as other cancers and
lung diseases.
The CBS said a rise in lung cancer
among Dutch women since the 1970s correlated with an increase in
smoking by women.
On average, female lung cancer
sufferers died at age 70 versus an average life expectancy for Dutch
women of 81.
Male lung cancer sufferers lived to
an age of 73 on average, compared with an average expectancy of 76
years for Dutch men.
The CBS said life expectancy for men
in the Netherlands has increased by about five years since the 1970s
as they have smoked less.
"The fall in cases of lung cancer
among men can be attributed to their smoking habits," it said. --
Reuters
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|