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Lung cancer kills more women every year than breast cancer. In fact, lung Cancer is the second leading cause of death among both men and women with statistics showing it is an increasing problem for women especially because they have an established vulnerability to developing lung cancer.

However, lung cancer creates additional risks and dilemmas for women, and these may be generalised in a single important way, and that's to do with smoking.

About 90% of most lung cancer deaths among women are as a result of of smoking or sucking in someone else's second-hand smoke. Passive smoking) (This really is known.

Although research has confirmed that smoking cause a wide selection of very serious health effects, 1 out of each and every 5 feamales in the U.S. and other western nations however smoke with this number rising with a disturbing regularity every year despite widespread advertising to exhibit how dangerous it is.

Numerous clinical tests which have been completed indicate that women who are former smokers may still have a significantly elevated threat of developing lung cancer even two decades after smoking has been quit by them. Nevertheless it is just fair to say that once they do stop smoking, the overall risk of developing lung cancer does drop.

Based on an article 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 are more prone to develop lung cancer than men who have never smoked.

These differences are because of hormonal, heritable, and metabolic differences between your sexes.

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

Women, even if they've never used, ought to be alert to their higher risks. Due to the elevated pitfalls that smoking causes for lung cancer and a range of other serious illnesses, female smokers in particular must think meticulously about quitting smoking when possible, as even though their previous history of smoking does make them more prone to developing lung cancer, at least the overall risk decreases when they quit.

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