Facts About Smoking
- About 8.6 million people in the U.S. have at least one serious illness that’s caused by smoking.
- For
every person that dies from a smoking-related disease, there are 20
more who suffer from at least one serious illness associated with
smoking.
- The CDC estimates that adult male smokers lose an
average of 13.2 years of life and female smokers lose 14.5 years of life
because of smoking, and given the diseases that smoking can cause, it
can steal your quality of life long before you die.
- Smoking is the cause of 1 in 5 deaths in the U.S. annually. And tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of death.
- The
shifting of the earth’s plates in the Indian Ocean on Dec. 26, 2004
caused a rupture more than 600 miles long, displacing the seafloor above
the rupture by perhaps 10 yards horizontally and several yards
vertically. As a result, trillions of tons of rock were moved along
hundreds of miles and caused the planet to shudder with the largest
magnitude earthquake in 40 years.
- Every day over 3,800 teens, 18 and younger, smoke their first cigarette. While, 1,000 teens start smoking on a daily basis.
- A single cigarette contains over 4,800 chemicals, 69 of which are known to cause cancer.
- Secondhand smoke contains over 7,000 chemicals, including 70 cancer-causing chemicals.
- In
2013, states will collect $25.7 billion from tobacco taxes and legal
settlements but are spending less than 2 percent of that on tobacco
control programs.
- Investing 15 percent ($3.7 billion) of the
$25.7 billion it would fund every state tobacco control program at
CDC-recommended levels.
- Every year, there are approximately 46,000 deaths from heart disease in people who are current non-smokers.
- Smoking increases your risk of getting lung diseases like pneumonia, emphysema and chronic bronchitis.