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'A BILLION WILL DIE' FROM
SMOKING
BBC News
October 4, 2005
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/4309222.stm
A billion people will die from tobacco-related diseases such as
cancer this century unless more are encouraged to quit, a UK expert
warns.
In the last century the death toll was about 100m, including 7m
in Britain.
Professor Sir Richard Peto told a cancer conference in Birmingham
developing
countries were likely to be hit hardest. Many nations are cutting
smoking, but rates are increasing in countries such
as India and China.
Smoking currently kills about five million adults a year globally.
Each year, about 30m people take up smoking around the world, Professor
Peto said.
He added: "If more than 20m of these continue to smoke and
half are killed by their habit, then we are going to have more than
10m tobacco-related deaths a year.
"So in the present century, if we keep on smoking the way we
are we will have about 1,000 million deaths," warned the Oxford
University Professor. That is equivalent to about a sixth of the
world's current population.
'Long way to go'
Although it is a global problem, some countries will be hit particularly
hard, experts predict.
In China, a third of young men are dying from smoking-related diseases
already.
Hungary is now the country with the worst tobacco death rate in
the world.
Professor Peter Boyle, Director of the International Agency for
Research on Cancer (IARC) from Lyon, France, said: "Part of
the problem is where we are going to see the big impact, with population
growth and population ageing
over the next 20 to 50 years.
He said that to a certain extent, these countries were the least
able to cope with the extra disease burden of smoking on top of
existing disease issues.
"The impact of tobacco is going to be absolutely enormous unless
we do something about it now."
Professors Boyle said more effort was needed to help smokers quit,
to restrict tobacco advertising and impose smoking bans in countries.
He said the experience of countries that have focused on such measures
showed they
could work.
"I think the message is beginning to get across but there is
a long way to go," he said. He said it was now essential to
"get the facts turned into policy."
But Simon Clark, of the smokers' rights group Forest, said: "This
seems like a suspiciously round figure.
"Such ludicrous estimates and calculations are so over the
top that people
are switching off, and the serious message underlying this type
of estimate
are being lost because a lot of people aren't listening."
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