The numbers don’t add up. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) smoking prevalence among adults in 1988 was 49.4 million.
But smoking prevalence in 2008 was 46 million.
Either a lot more kids are taking up smoking or a lot fewer smokers than 5% are quitting. Setting the number of smoking-related deaths to zero only raises the total to 21 million. How do we account for an additional 25 to 30 million smokers? I’ll put my money on the vast majority of that discrepancy being caused by an inflated estimate of the percent of smokers who succeed in quitting each year.
Which goes to show there is a critical need for more effective tools to help smokers.
Just found the American Heart Association's statement of how many quit each year: 1.3 million. Substituting their fixed number for the 5% gives us 21 million. So we are still missing 25 million smokers--maybe only 16 million if nobody died for 20 years.
- The Campaign for tobacco Free Kids states that 350,000 kids become daily smokers each year.
- Various sources estimate that 400,000 die of smoking related diseases each year.
- The American Cancer Society tells us that 5% of smokers quit each year.
But smoking prevalence in 2008 was 46 million.
Either a lot more kids are taking up smoking or a lot fewer smokers than 5% are quitting. Setting the number of smoking-related deaths to zero only raises the total to 21 million. How do we account for an additional 25 to 30 million smokers? I’ll put my money on the vast majority of that discrepancy being caused by an inflated estimate of the percent of smokers who succeed in quitting each year.
Which goes to show there is a critical need for more effective tools to help smokers.
Just found the American Heart Association's statement of how many quit each year: 1.3 million. Substituting their fixed number for the 5% gives us 21 million. So we are still missing 25 million smokers--maybe only 16 million if nobody died for 20 years.
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