Health
Quitting smoking even at age 60 can cut death risk
London, April 23
Even if you quit smoking at
the age of 60, you can lower the risk of heart attack and stroke within
the first five years, say German researchers.
After a person
quits smoking, this risk continues to decrease. On an average, the risk
for former smokers is only 1.3 times that of people who have never
smoked in their lives.
In the most comprehensive study so far on
the impact of smoking on cardiovascular disease among older people,
epidemiologist Ute Mons from the German Cancer Research Centre analysed
25 individual studies, compiling data from over half a million
individuals aged 60 and older.
He found that the more time that
has passed since one has quit, the more considerable the decrease in a
former smoker's risk of dying from heart attack or stroke.
"Within the first five years after smoking one's last cigarette, the risk already decreases measurably," he noted.
The increase in risk depends on the number of cigarettes that a person has smoked in his or her lifetime.
After one quits smoking, this risk continues to decrease.
Since
people often find it difficult to determine the relevance of relative
risks, Mons and her colleagues also used an alternative method to assess
the results of their meta-analysis.
They calculated the number of years by which smoking accelerates death from heart disease.
They
found that the age of smokers who die from cardiovascular disease is,
on average, five-and-half years younger than people who have never
smoked in their lives.
By contrast, the age for former smokers drops to just over two years younger than life-long non-smokers.
"Therefore,
it is never too late to stop smoking. Even people in the highest age
group still gain considerable health benefits from it," concluded study
head professor Hermann Brenner.