Banning tobacco for young people could prevent 1.2m cancer deaths: study
PARIS: Banning the sale of tobacco to people born between 2006 and 2010 could prevent around 1.2 million deaths from lung cancer by the end of the century, said a modelling study released on Thursday.
Smoking is responsible for roughly 85 percent of all cases of lung cancer, the deadliest cancer worldwide, according to the World Health Organisation.
If current trends continue, there will be nearly three million lung cancer deaths among people born from 2006 to 2010, said the new study from the WHO´s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC).
But if tobacco sales were banned for these 650 million people, around 1.2 million deaths could be prevented by 2095, estimated the modelling research published in The Lancet Public Health journal.
The study, one of the first studies aiming to assess the impact of a tobacco-free generation, drew on data about cancer cases and deaths from 185 countries.
More than 45 percent of lung cancer deaths among men around the world could be prevented, and nearly 31 percent among women, the research found.
“This difference is linked to the tobacco industry´s gender-targeted marketing over the past few decades,” IARC researcher and study co-author Isabelle Soerjomataram said in a statement.
-
Mark Ruffalo Makes Strong Political Comments At 2026 Golden Globes -
Leonardo DiCaprio's Girlfriend Flaunts Stylish Dress After Golden Globes Age Joke -
Harry Styles Launches Secret Site, Fuels Comeback Speculation -
Kate Middleton's New Approach Expected To Draw Criticism From Meghan's Camp -
Jennifer Lawrence Admits Feeling Nervous Over Taking New Step -
Lee Cronin’s ‘The Mummy’ Drops Its Chilling First Trailer -
Louis Tomlinson Reveals What Former 1D Members' Dynamic Is After Liam Payne's Death -
Jacob Elordi, Ana De Armas Get Cozy During 2026 Golden Globes -
Meghan Markle Turns Juvenile And Plans Half Bit Ruse: ‘She’s Trying To Get On Her Radar’ -
Anthropic Rolls Out Healthcare Features For Claude AI Amid OpenAI Push -
Inside 'Stranger Things' Team's Daring Method To Film Finale -
Robert Irwin Announces His Return To Reality TV After 'DWTS' Victory -
Uber Faces Landmark Trial In US Over Sexual Assault Claim -
Zoë Kravitz Makes Major Decision Before Arriving At 2026 Golden Globes -
Jennifer Lawrence Offers Major Role To Ariana Grande, Singer Responds -
Maya Hawke Highlights Major Discrepancy In 'Stranger Things' Season 5