Categories · Health/Science
· Cessation
· Lung Cancer
· Op-Ed
· Editorial
non-USA, by Country · UK
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BMJ 2010;340:b5630, doi: 10.1136/bmj.b5630 (Published 21 January 2010) Jump to full article: British Medical Journal, 2010-01-22 Author: Tom Treasure, professor of cardiothoracic surgery1, Janet Treasure, professor of psychiatry2
Intro: Do we need more evidence on the harm done by smoking? Smoking is a major contributor to common diseases such as heart attack, stroke, peripheral vascular disease, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. In addition, most lung cancers are caused by smoking and it is also a risk factor for cancers of the breast and bowel. The blogger who wrote last year that smoking bans were illiberal and "justified by bullshit science"1 will have gained little informed support. Smoking costs life and limb; smokers are even prematurely wrinkly.2
The linked study by Parsons and colleagues (doi: 10.1136/bmj.b5569) adds more to the evidence. The meta-analysis of the effect of continued smoking after a diagnosis of mostly early stage lung cancer shows that continued smoking substantially increases the risk of death, and that a large proportion of the increased risk is the result of cancer progression rather than cardiorespiratory disease.
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