Skip Navigation

Fact Sheet - Tobacco

  Beginner   Intermediate   Advanced

 Full Text [Fact #28]
  • Smoking by children and adolescents hastens the onset of lung function decline during late adolescence and early adulthood.
 Full Text [Fact #81]
  • Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States, and cigarette smoking causes most cases.
 Full Text [Fact #88]
  • Smoking cigarettes that have a lower yield of tar does not substantially reduce the risk for lung cancer.
 Full Text [Fact #97]
  • Cigarette smoking has been associated with sudden cardiac death of all types in both men and women.
 Full Text [Fact #107]
  • In general, smokers’ lung function declines faster than that of nonsmokers.
  • Youth, minorities, and low-income smokers are 2 to 3 times more likely to quit or smoke less than other smokers in response to price increases.
 Full Text [Fact #703]
  • Approximately 80% of adult smokers started smoking before the age of 18, and almost no one begins after the age of 25.
 Full Text [Fact #725]
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that 70% of adolescent smokers report wishing they had never started smoking.
  • Tobacco use is the single most preventable cause of death and disease in our society.
 Full Text [Fact #7245]
  • Children who smoke cigarettes at an early age are 3 times more likely to use marijuana and 4 times more likely to use cocaine than those who do not smoke, according to the National Center for Tobacco-Free Kids.
 Full Text [Fact #6524]
  • Smokers lose an average of 12 to 15 years of life.


Bullets:               

Output fact sheet as: