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Good News! Tiong population will decline, study says

Falling

Alfrescian
Loyal

Smoking gun: one in three young men in China will die from tobacco, study says

Mainland labour force and public health system will face severe strain in the future unless smokers get help now to kick the habit, studies warn

PUBLISHED : Friday, 09 October, 2015, 11:49am
UPDATED : Saturday, 10 October, 2015, 3:42pm

Mimi Lau and Associated Press

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Men smoke in northwestern China's Yinchuan airport in October. Photo: AP

By 2030, two million Chinese smokers will be killed annually because of their deadly habit - unless programmes are implemented across the country to help them kick the vice, a top medical journal has warned.

Studies published in The Lancet by researchers from Oxford University, the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and the Chinese Centre for Disease Control showed that two-thirds of China's young men smoke, and unless they quit, half of them would die from it.

"About two-thirds of young Chinese men become cigarette smokers, and most start before they are 20. Unless they stop, about half of them will eventually be killed by their habit," said Oxford University's Zhengming Chen, co-author of the article.

China has more than 350 million smokers, who consume over a third of the world's cigarettes and account for a sixth of the global smoking death toll. The country's population is 1.4 billion.

"The annual number of deaths in China that are caused by tobacco will rise from about one million in 2010 to two million in 2030 and three million in 2050, unless there is widespread cessation," the researchers wrote.

"Widespread smoking cessation offers China one of the most effective, and cost-effective, strategies to avoid disability and premature death over the next few decades."

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China's 350 million smokers consume over a third of the world's cigarettes and make up a sixth of the global smoking death toll. Photo: AP

Wu Yiqun, deputy director of the think tank Research Centre for Health Development, said the study highlighted China's problem of young smokers.

"The estimate is scientific as it is based on preliminary studies and a summary of previous research," she said. "The Chinese future is built by healthy youngsters; there is no Chinese dream if they are dying prematurely."

Criticising the progress of China's smoking ban as "far from ideal", Wu urged the government to step up its efforts against powerful tobacco company lobbyists. "It will not hurt our economy as it's a gradual process, we are not asking for an immediate shutdown of all tobacco plants."

Yang Gonghuan, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences' Institute of Basic Medical Sciences and a former National Office of Tobacco Control director, said: "If the government does not take the scientific studies seriously, the loss in public health expenditure and labour force will be catastrophic."

China's 2010 smoking death toll comprised some 840,000 men and 130,000 women. Smokers have about twice the mortality rate of people who have never smoked.

The proportion of deaths attributed to smoking among Chinese men aged 40 to 79 had doubled from about 10 per cent in the early 1990s to 20 per cent today, the researchers said.

Oxford University's Richard Peto, one of the study's authors, said tobacco deaths in Western countries had been dropping for 20 years, partly because of stiff price rises. "For China, a substantial increase in cigarette prices could save tens of millions of lives," he said.


 

sleaguepunter

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
PRC population will peak in 2025 and will start decline due to the one child policy. The one child policy is more damaging than the wide spread smoking. There are now ten of millions Chinese men with no hope of wife due to gender imbalance. The one child policy also result in the current 4-2-1 replacement rate. Although cccp started to reverse the one child policy but it already too late for some.
 

harimau

Alfrescian
Loyal
no worries China got plenty of people.

one third gone, still got 1 billion left!

its hardly a dent in the country population!
 

yellowarse

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
It's a blessing to Tiongland. Cities will be less crowded, nature spots will be better preserved, less pollution, golden week holidays will not take place in a sardine can, and the annual Spring Festival migration (the world's largest) will be moderated. No 50-lane traffic jams.

Quality of life goes up, prices go down, prime retirement destination.
 

Falling

Alfrescian
Loyal

China suffers 250,000 road deaths a year: WHO

AFP
October 20, 2015, 8:07 pm

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Beijing (AFP) - More than 250,000 people are killed on China's notoriously dangerous roads every year, the World Health Organization (WHO) said -- over four times official government statistics.

In a global status report on road safety, the WHO estimated 261,367 people were killed in 2013 in the world's most populous country.

China is the world's biggest auto market and its growing middle class is increasingly able to afford cars.

The WHO figures are strikingly higher than official pronouncements, in a country where official statistics are often questioned.

According to China's National Bureau of Statistics, 58,539 traffic fatalities were reported in 2013 -- less than a quarter of the WHO's approximation.

Fatal road accidents are a serious problem in China, where traffic regulations are often flouted.

The country's frequently overcrowded long-distance buses are prone to accidents, with individual incidents regularly causing dozens of deaths.

"It is not enough to adopt laws," China's WHO representative Bernhard Schwartlaender wrote in state media in May. "They must also be properly and rigorously enforced."

According to the WHO report, released Monday, China's estimated traffic-related death rate of 18.8 per 100,000 people was in line with the 18.5 average for middle-income countries but higher than the 9.3 seen in high-income nations.

Death rates remain comparatively high in China because of inadequate rescue systems and poor treatment, according to a study by Chinese researchers published in April by medical journal The Lancet.

More than one in four who died on China's roads were pedestrians, the WHO report said, citing statistics from China's ministry of public security, and the vast majority of fatalities -- 72 percent -- were men.

Road injuries are the third leading cause of years of life lost to premature death in China, ranking above any individual form of cancer, according to the Global Burden of Disease Study, a global research programme.


 

harimau

Alfrescian
Loyal
Based on current statistics and future projections!

Singapore population will extinct faster than Tiong!
 
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