News Release

Smokers more likely to be disabled in later life

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Center for Advancing Health

Smokers are not only likely to die earlier than non-smokers, but they are more likely to spend more of their life with a disability than non-smokers, finds research in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. And this is despite the fact that non-smokers, by virtue of living longer, would be expected to experience more disability.

The study included over 5,500 adults from the ages of 15 to 74 living in Eindhoven and surrounding districts in the Netherlands, and a further 7,500 elderly people living in the USA. Their overall life expectancies were assessed at the ages of 30 and 70, as well as their life expectancies with and without disability.

The researchers found that the prevalence of disability at each age was lower among non-smokers than among former and current smokers. Non-smokers tended to live fewer years with disability despite living longer. This is because they run lower risks of developing disability through cardiovascular disease, for example, but also because they recovered more quickly from episodes of disability.

At the age of 30, non-smoking men could expect reductions of 11 months and women 13 months in the amount of time spent with a disability. Men who gave up smoking could expect to live 2.5 years, and women just under two years longer, without a disability. The effects were still seen at the age of 70 but were less pronounced.

The authors conclude that giving up smoking not only lengthens lifespan and increases the length of time lived without a disability, but also compresses disability into shorter periods.

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Contacts: Dr. Wilma Nusselder, Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands, Friday and Saturday only
or
Dr. van de Mheen, Tel: 31-10-425-3366, Email: vandemheen@ivo.nl.

[Smoking and compression of morbidity. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 2000; 54;566-74]

For further information about the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health or to obtain a copy of the article, please contact Public Affairs Division, British Medical Association, BMA House, Tavistock Square, London WC1H 9JP, Tel: 44-20-7383-6254 or email: pressoffice@bma.org.uk. After 6 p.m. and on weekends telephone: 44-208-241-6386 / 44-208-997-3653/ 44-208-674-6294 / 44-1525-379792 / 44-208-651-5130.

Posted by the Center for the Advancement of Health http://www.cfah.org. For information about the Center, call Petrina Chong, pchong@cfah.org 202-387-2829.



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