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Rapid action to eliminate smoking globally could significantly increase life expectancy and prevent millions of premature deaths by 2050, according to a new study published in The Lancet Public Health. The research provides the first in-depth global forecasts of smoking-related health impacts, suggesting that a concerted effort to reduce smoking rates to 5% by 2050 could lead to profound public health benefits. The study, conducted by the Global Burden of Disease, Injuries and Risk Factors (GBD) Tobacco Forecasting Collaborators, models various scenarios to project future global smoking trends and their effects on population health.

According to the findings, if smoking rates continue to decline at their current pace, global smoking prevalence could drop to 21.1% in men and 4.18% in women by 2050.



At this rate, findings from the study suggest, life expectancy could rise to 78.3 years these 25 years — up from 73.6 years in 2022.

However, if global smoking rates are reduced to 5% in that time frame, the analysis predicts an additional one year of life expectancy for men and 0.2 years for women. This reduction would also prevent an estimated 876 million years of life lost (YLLs) — a measure of premature death — by 2050.

If smoking had been eliminated entirely starting in 2023, the study suggests even greater benefits: up to 2.04 billion YLLs could have been avoided, with life expectancy increasing by 1.5 years for men and 0.

4 years for women. ALSO READ ON ABP LIVE | Over 1.

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