Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Kicking The Habit: Adult Smoking Rate In US Is Falling Fast

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 May, 2016 11:10 AM
    NEW YORK — The nation seems to be kicking its smoking habit faster than ever before.
     
    The rate of smoking among adults in the U.S. fell to 15 per cent last year thanks to the biggest one-year decline in more than 20 years, according to a new government report.
     
    The rate fell 2 percentage points from 2014, when about 17 per cent of adults in a large national survey said they had recently smoked.
     
    The smoking rate has been falling for decades, but it usually drops only 1 point or less in a year.
     
    The last time there was a drop nearly as big was from 1992 to 1993, when the smoking rate fell 1.5 percentage points, according to Brian King of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
     
    The CDC reported the new statistic Tuesday. It's based on a large national survey that is the government's primary measuring stick for many health-related trends.
     
    Smoking is the nation's leading cause of preventable illness, causing more than 480,000 deaths each year in the United States, the CDC estimates.
     
    Why the smoking rate fell so much in 2015 — and whether it will fall as fast again — is not quite clear.
     
    About 50 years ago, roughly 42 per cent of U.S. adults smoked. It was common nearly everywhere — in office buildings, restaurants, airplanes and even hospitals. The smoking rate's gradual decline has coincided with an increased public understanding that smoking is a cause of cancer, heart disease and other lethal health problems.
     
     
    Experts attribute recent declines decline to the mounting impact of anti-smoking advertising campaigns, cigarette taxes and smoking bans.
     
    The increased marketing of electronic cigarettes and their growing popularity has also likely played a role. But it is not yet clear whether this will help further propel the decline in smoking, or contribute to an increase in smoking in years to come.
     
    E-cigarettes heat liquid nicotine into a vapour, delivering the chemical that smokers crave without the harmful by-products generated from burning tobacco.
     
    That makes them a potentially useful tool to help smokers quit, but experts fear it also creates a new way for people to get addicted to nicotine.
     
    Some CDC surveys have shown a boom in e-cigarette use among teenagers, and health officials fear many of those kids will get hooked on nicotine and later become smokers.
     
    As today's teenage e-cigarette users become adults in the next few years, "we may see 18-, 19- and 20-year olds pick up the habit," worried Dr. Jonathan Whiteson, a smoking cessation specialist at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York.
     
    Still, he and others are optimistic in part because regulators are turning their attention to the potential dangers of e-cigarettes. Earlier this month, the Food and Drug Administration announced sweeping new rules that will for the first time apply long-standing rules covering traditional cigarettes to e-cigarettes, hookah tobacco, pipe tobacco and nicotine gels. Minors would be banned from buying the products.
     
     
    "We'd expect continued declines in smoking, as we've seen in the past 50 years. But it's hard to say what future holds," King said.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Tapping Into Tiny House Trend, More Businesses Offer Tryouts Of The Radically Small Lifestyle

    Tapping Into Tiny House Trend, More Businesses Offer Tryouts Of The Radically Small Lifestyle
    CROYDON, N.H. — Hilary and Shane Lentz were hooked on the idea of a tiny house, but they weren't sure the reality would be so appealing.

    Tapping Into Tiny House Trend, More Businesses Offer Tryouts Of The Radically Small Lifestyle

    Aziz Ansari Gives Bobby Jindal New Slogan: Taste The Fat

    Aziz Ansari Gives Bobby Jindal New Slogan: Taste The Fat
    Indian-American comedian, actor and best-selling author Aziz Ansari mocked long shot Indian-American Republican presidential candidate Bobby Jindal on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon.

    Aziz Ansari Gives Bobby Jindal New Slogan: Taste The Fat

    Introverts Should Stay Away From Facebook

    Introverts Should Stay Away From Facebook
    If you are an introvert, better stay away from Facebook as the social networking site suits extroverts more, suggests a new study.

    Introverts Should Stay Away From Facebook

    Movember Charity Campaign Seeks To Draw More Men With Moustaches To Cause

    Movember Charity Campaign Seeks To Draw More Men With Moustaches To Cause
    "Unlike other charities, it wasn't one run or one event — it was the whole month," said the Edmonton-based realtor, who has participated in the annual Movember campaign for six years

    Movember Charity Campaign Seeks To Draw More Men With Moustaches To Cause

    Mistrial Declared In US Cop's Assault On Indian Grandfather Sureshbhai Patel

    For the second time in less than two months, a US judge declared a mistrial in the case against an Alabama police officer charged with slamming an Indian grandfather to the ground last February and severely injuring him.

    Mistrial Declared In US Cop's Assault On Indian Grandfather Sureshbhai Patel

    Elvis Cake, Keepsake Book And Ultimate Selfie-Helper Phone Case Among Oprah's Favorite Things

    Elvis Cake, Keepsake Book And Ultimate Selfie-Helper Phone Case Among Oprah's Favorite Things
    A Kardashian-worthy phone case rimmed with tiny lights, a keepsake book of "Letters to My Love" and a banana, peanut butter and chocolate cake called the Elvis are among Oprah's Favorite Things of 2015.

    Elvis Cake, Keepsake Book And Ultimate Selfie-Helper Phone Case Among Oprah's Favorite Things