UICC GLOBALink Presents...
The Tobacco Reference Guide
by David Moyer, MD.


Chapter 2 Demographics of tobacco use

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About half a billion of the 5.5 billion people now alive will eventually be killed by

tobacco. Of the 800 million smokers alive today in developing countries, about 200

million will be killed by tobacco, half in middle age. "What we've seen so far is nothing

compared to what you'll see in developing countries...We are expecting a tidal wave

of mortality."

Dr. Alan Lopez, World Health Organization (New York Times, September 21, 1994,

p. A16)

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Worldwide, smoking causes one death every 10 seconds, or 3 million people each

year. If current smoking patterns persist, in several decades there will be one death

every 3 seconds, or 10 million deaths each year.

Mortality from Smoking, p. A99

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For young adults who smoke cigarettes regularly, just over half of those who die in

middle age will have been killed by tobacco. Overall, regular cigarette smokers lose

about 8 years of projected life expectancy (or 16 years, for the half who are killed by

the habit: 20 to 25 years for those killed in middle age, plus 5 to 10 years for those

killed at older ages).

Mortality from Smoking, p. A1

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The annual toll of premature deaths caused by tobacco will rise from 3 million

worldwide in the 1990's to 10 million by the year 2025. Half a billion people alive

today, including 200 million at present under the age of 20, will eventually die from

tobacco-induced disease, half of them in middle age.

Lancet, April 28, 1990, p. 1026

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Copyright (©) 2000 - David Moyer - published on UICC GLOBALink