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Bronchitis
About 400,000 smokers in the United States die each year. But 3,000 NONsmokers die each year from inhaling the smoke.
Yes it is true. You lose 7 minutes of your life for every cigarette you smoke. I disagree.There is no way one can quantify such a variable. Many heavy smokers live to a ripe old age. Some light smokers die relatively early as do some nonsmokers. For smokers and nonsmokers alike the mortality (death) rate is 100%!
about 10 or 20 more years
Besides the obvious, which is tobacco, smokers will pay more for dental care, health insurance, and life insurance. They will also have higher medical bills, as smokers have higher rates of sinusitis, bronchitis, low Back pain, and many other conditions.
Every year, almost 1,000 smokers and nonsmokers are killed in home fires caused by cigarettes and other smoking materials. 1 in 4 killed aren't the smokers yet more than one third of children were the smoker's own
Yes, you can have a heart attack even if you quit smoking many years ago. Not all heart attacks occur in smokers. Smoking increases the risk of a heart attack, though. Within eight to 15 years of quitting smoking, your risk of heart attack is at the same level as that of nonsmokers.
The tissue of smokers' lungs contains residue of tar and nicotine formed from the smoke. It effectively blocks oxygen from mixing with the blood, and creates the conditions for carcinoma. Non-smokers' lungs generally do not.
Besides the obvious, which is tobacco, smokers will pay more for dental care, health insurance, and life insurance. They will also have higher medical bills, as smokers have higher rates of sinusitis, bronchitis, low Back pain, and many other conditions.
About 60 to 65 years. If they are lucky they might live 70 years. The reason that their life span is so short is because the tobacco in the cigarette and other chemicals in the cigarette damage your lungs, brain, and heart. Smoking can also lead to cancer.
490 years earlier.
they are 1000 smokers each year