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Each cigarette someone smokes, on average, can take about 20 minutes off their life expectancy overall, according to new research based on British smokers.
“The time they’re losing is time that they could be spending with their loved ones in fairly good health,” Jackson said.
“With smoking, it doesn’t eat into the later period of your life that tends to be lived in poorer health. Rather, it seems to erode some relatively healthier section in the middle of life,” she said. “So when we’re talking about loss of life expectancy, life expectancy would tend to be lived in relatively good health.”
The research, which was commissioned by the UK Department for Health and Social Care, includes mortality data on men from the British Doctors Study and data on women from the Million Women Study. These studies found that on average, people who smoked throughout their lives lost around 10 years of life compared with people who never smoked.
Overall, the new data from the UK indicates that the harm caused by smoking appears to be cumulative. And the amount of life expectancy that can be recovered by quitting may depend on several factors, such as age and how long someone has smoked.
“In terms of regaining this life lost, it’s complicated,” Jackson said.
“These studies have shown that people who quit at a very young age – so by their 20s or early 30s – tend to have a similar life expectancy to people who have never smoked. But as you get older, you progressively lose a little bit more that you then can’t regain by quitting,” she said.
“But no matter how old you are when you quit, you will always have a longer life expectancy than if you had continued to smoke. So, in effect, while you may not be reversing the life lost already, you’re preventing further loss of life expectancy.”
In their paper, Jackson and her colleagues wrote that a person smoking 10 cigarettes per day who quits smoking on January 1 could prevent the loss of a full day of life by January 8.
They could prevent loss of a full week of life by February 20 and a full month by August 5. By the end of the year, they could have avoided losing 50 days of life expectancy.
“Stopping smoking is, without a doubt, the best thing you can do for your health,” Jackson said. “And the sooner you stop smoking, the longer you’ll live.”
“The good news is, it does begin to reset,” he said when the study was released. “It’s never a good time to start smoking, but if you’re a smoker, the best time to stop is now.”