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Revision as of 23:46, 3 March 2013 by 173.237.181.25 (Talk)

Lung cancer kills more women every year than breast cancer. In fact, lung Cancer is the 2nd leading reason behind death among both men and women with statistics showing it is a growing problem for women particularly because they have a proven susceptibility to developing lung cancer.

Nevertheless, lung cancer poses additional risks and dilemmas for women, and these can be generalised in one single key way, and that is regarding smoking.

About 3 months of lung cancer deaths among women are as a direct result of smoking or breathing in somebody else's second-hand smoke. (That is called Passive smoking).

That smoking cause a wide selection of very serious health consequences, 1 from every 5 feamales in the U.S even though research has established. and other western countries however smoke with this number growing with a troubling regularity every year despite widespread advertising to exhibit how dangerous it's.

Various research studies which have been done suggest that women who're former smokers may still have a somewhat increased risk of developing lung cancer even 20 years after they have quit smoking. Nevertheless it is only fair to state that once they do quit smoking, the general risk of developing lung cancer does fall.

According to a write-up in the Journal of Clinical Oncology in 2005:

Female smokers tend to be more likely than male smokers to produce lung cancer,

Women who have never smoked tend to be more likely to produce lung cancer than men who've never smoked.

These differences are due to hormonal, hereditary, and metabolic differences involving the sexes.

Female smokers are 13 times more likely to die of lung cancer than women who've never smoked, and feminine former smokers are 5 times as likely as women who've never smoked to die of lung cancer.

Women, even if they've never smoked, should really be alert to their higher risks. Because of the increased risks that smoking causes for lung cancer and a variety of other serious conditions, female smokers specifically must think cautiously about stopping smoking as soon as possible, as even though their previous history of smoking does make them more liable to developing lung cancer, at least the general risk decreases if they leave.

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