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MarineLife42 t1_j96fer2 wrote

No.
In medicine, you always have to distinguish between a cause and a risk factor. When you fall off your bike and break your arm, then the fall was the cause, as it led directly to the injury. SARS-CoV-2, the virus, is the cause for Covid 19, the illness.

Smoking, however, is a risk factor. Take lung cancer: non-smokers can absolutely contract it, but it is actually quite a rare disease for them.
For smokers, it is a very frequent disease but only some of them get it, not all of them. So, smoking greatly increases your risk of lung cancer. Nevertheless, if you have a particular patient in front of you who A., has lung cancer and B., is or was a smoker, you cannot prove that the smoking caused the cancer. It is awfully likely but there is always a (small) chance that the individual might have contracted cancer without smoking anyway.

That said, as far as risk factors go smoking is right up there with the big ones, secod only to (maybe) obesity. Smoking greatly increases your risk of:

  • cancers of the lung, mouth, tongue, throat/lanrynx, esophagus (food pipe), trachea (wind pipe), stomach, intestinal tract, kidneys, and bladder, and probably a few more,

  • heart disease (both heart attack and heart failure),

  • stroke,

  • COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease), which few smokers have on their radar but is actually affecting millions and millions of smokers. It is what you get when a lung damaged by years of cigarette smoke goes into a downward spiral of infection and re-infection. There is no cure. Sufferers get shorter of breath little by little until, finally, their weakened hearts give out.

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DenseHovercraft2288 t1_j96yz4x wrote

Only like 10-15% of smokers get lung cancer, so it's not that common with them as well. Most end up dying of vascular diseases and lung diseases.

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darthaxolotl t1_j979ai4 wrote

Wow, wow, wow -- 10-15% of smokers get lung cancer that is A LOT. Yes, most of them end up dying of vascular or lung disease other than cancer (and probably some of those that died of heart attacks also related to their smoking would have gone on to get lung cancer). In non-smokers the number of primary lung cancers is <<1%.

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Unlikely_Plankton_11 t1_j989zk0 wrote

It's a lot for sure. Huge number. It's just kind of less than you would have thought. And keep in mind that the category of "smokers" has both those who smoke a pack a week and those who smoke 5 packs per day.

Even if you smoke a pack a day for 20 years, your risk of getting lung cancer - while way higher than someone who has never smoked, is still surprisingly low in an absolute sense. I would have thought it'd be like 80% or something. Not the case. It turns out that as far as smokers go, a pack a day is "light."

All of the other health effects, however, are honestly a much more compelling reason to quit. It's easy to brush off an elevated but still unlikely death by cancer. But it's not like you're fine and then you just up and die one day when you're 85. That honestly wouldn't be so bad at all. Much more common is that you'll live much of your life with weird chest pains, coughing every morning, getting out of breath going on walks, etc. Planning your life around smoke breaks and not smelling like smoke before going to the office or on a date, keeping your car/house from smelling like smoke, etc. Your QOL goes way down long before you get cancer - if you ever even do.

That was what motivated me to quit smoking when I was 26. And uh...again when I was 32 (though I quit for 2 years in the middle). I could feel that I was a smoker, and that was scary. You're not supposed to feel sick when you take a deep breath.

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Indemnity4 t1_j98ec6u wrote

Statistics are great fun!

About 20% of the lung cancer deaths in the USA are non-smokers, or ~7000 people a year.

While lots of people know about smoking=cancer, most don't know about smoking=COPD or heart disease. Cancer sure is up there as the scariest, but it's not the thing that will probably kill you.

Crudely, very roughly taking those numbers: smokers are ONLY 4X more likely to die from lung cancer than general population. That's, surprisingly not that much higher. There are way riskier activities such as SCUBA diving or living near a busy road.

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redligand t1_j97jyah wrote

It is a lot, yes. But they still have a bit of a point. In absolute terms lung cancer isn't hugely common in smokers. About 1 in 10. So you're still somewhat unlikely to get lung cancer as a smoker. Although you're massively more likely to get it compared with someone who has never smoked. So it's a huge relative risk but a somewhat low absolute risk. As an individual even if you smoke the odds are still in your favour wrt lung cancer. Of course, with smoking there is a bunch of other things that can kill you before you get the chance to win the prize of lung cancer. So that has to be considered too.

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