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16 Disturbing Numbers That Prove Our Smoking Epidemic Is Far From Over

Thomas3.20.2010
0 6 11

Every year, the American Cancer Society dubs the third Thursday of November the Great American Smokeout, a day of encouragement for smokers to kick the habit -- even just for one day.

Currently, about 18 percent of Americans say they smoke cigarettes -- a dramatic drop from smoking rates of years passed. On the other hand, use of electronic cigarettes is on the rise: The American Heart Association cites predictions that e-cigarette sales will amount to a $10 billion industry by the year 2017, and "vape", the term given to consuming that nicotine vapor, was even named Oxford Dictionary's 2014 word of the year.

But tobacco use remains the leading preventable cause of death. By 2030, around8 million people will die annually from the habit, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

So while we've made undeniable progress, we clearly have a long way to go. If you or a smoker in your life is not yet convinced, here are a few numbers to remind us all why it's important we get there.

  

480,000


The number of deaths in the United States caused by cigarette smoking and secondhand smoke every year. 
 

  

127,700


The number of those tobacco-related deaths from lung cancer alone
 

  

87%


The percentage of lung cancer deaths in the U.S. that are caused by smoking
 

  

1 in 3

  

The number of total cancer deaths caused by smoking

  
   

42,000,000

  
  


The number of Americans who smoke cigarettes
 

  
   

13,400,000

  
  


The number of Americans who smoke cigars
 

  
   

2,300,000

  
  


The number of Americans who smoke tobacco in pipes 
 

  
   

10

  
  


The number of years longer a nonsmoker is expected to live than a smoker. However, quit before you turn 40 and you'll reduce your risk of dying from a smoking-related illness by about 90 percent. 

  

 

  
     
  
   
    

1,000

   
   
    The number of cigarettes consumed per person per year in the United States. Worldwide, the country with the highest cigarette consumption rate is Serbia, at  2,861 cigarettes per person per year  , the Washington Post reported.  
   
   
    

$96,000,000,000

   
   
    The total tobacco-related health care costs from 2000 to 2004 in the U.S.,  according to the American Cancer Society   
   
   
    

15 years

   
   
    The length of time it takes for a former   smoker's risk of coronary heart disease   to drop back down to that of a non-smoker's.  
   
   
    

25%

   
   


The percentage of their entire income that low-income New York smokers spend on cigarettes, according to a 2012 study

   

 

   
       
   
    
     

$8,400,000,000

    
    
     Dollars spent by the tobacco industry    on advertising and promotions    in 2011.   
    
    
     

69

    
    
     At least this many of the more than 7,000 chemicals and compounds in tobacco smoke have been    found to cause cancer     
    
    
     

293,000,000,000

    
    
     The    total number of cigarettes purchased    in the United States in 2011.   
    
    
     

3,200

    
    
     The number of teens and children under 18    who smoke their first cigarette every day    in the U.S.  
  
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About the Author
63 years old. 20 year smoker. 11 Years FREE! Diagnosed with COPD. Choosing a Quality LIFE! It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery. -Galatians 5:1