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RESEARCH PAPER |
1 National Health Screening Service,*, Oslo, Norway
2 Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Nydalen, Oslo, Norway
Correspondence to:
Dr Kjell Bjartveit
Fridtjof Nansens vei 24 B, N-0369 Oslo, Norway (home address); kjell.bjartveit{at}chello.no
Objectives: To determine the risk in men and women smoking 14 cigarettes per day of dying from specified smoking related diseases and from any cause.
Design: Prospective study.
Setting: Oslo city and three counties in Norway.
Participants: 23 521 men and 19 201 women, aged 3549 years, screened for cardiovascular disease risk factors in the mid 1970s and followed throughout 2002.
Outcomes: Absolute mortality and relative risks adjusted for confounding variables, of dying from ischaemic heart disease, all cancer, lung cancer, and from all causes.
Results: Adjusted relative risk (95% confidence interval) in smokers of 14 cigarettes per day, with never smokers as reference, of dying from ischaemic heart disease was 2.74 (2.07 to 3.61) in men and 2.94 (1.75 to 4.95) in women. The corresponding figures for all cancer were 1.08 (0.78 to 1.49) and 1.14 (0.84 to 1.55), for lung cancer 2.79 (0.94 to 8.28) and 5.03 (1.81 to 13.98), and for any cause 1.57 (1.33 to 1.85) and 1.47 (1.19 to 1.82).
Conclusions: In both sexes, smoking 14 cigarettes per day was associated with a significantly higher risk of dying from ischaemic heart disease and from all causes, and from lung cancer in women. Smoking control policymakers and health educators should emphasise more strongly that light smokers also endanger their health.
Keywords: ischaemic heart disease; cancer; light smoking; mortality
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