Health News
Kentucky's adult smoking rate falls below 25% for the first time
For the first time since state smoking rates were measured, fewer than one in four Kentucky adults are smokers, according to a report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The rate in 2010 was 24.8 percent, down from 28.7 percent in 2009. The rates are based on a national survey of 17,000 adults.
The national average of 19.3 percent, down 1.6 percent from 2005, is "slower than in the previous five-year period," the CDC reports in a release. This decline may be due in part to "increases in federal and state taxes on cigarettes and new clean air laws," Dr. Tim McAfee, director of the CDC's office on smoking and health told Lindsey Tanner of The Associated Press. (Read more)
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U.s. Adult Smoking Rate Dips To 18 Percent; When State Rates Come Out, Will Kentucky Still Have The Country's Highest?
CDC chart; confidence interval (or error margin) means that 95 percent of the time, the result for the entire U.S. population would be within the range indicated at the tops of the bars.The smoking rate for U.S. adults dropped to 18 percent...
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U.s. Teens' Cigarette Use Drops To A New Low, But Use Of Alcohol Goes Up A Bit And More 12th Graders Are Smoking Marijuana
Teenagers' cigarette smoking dropped to a record low this year but alcohol use rose slightly after seven years of decline, according to a survey of 45,000 eighth-, 10th- and 12th- graders for the National Institute of Drug Abuse. The survey also found...
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Poll Finds Kentucky Has The Highest Smoking Rate In The Country; A Statewide Ban Would Reduce It, Advocates Say
Kentucky has the highest smoking rate in the country, with 29 percent of people surveyed by the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index answering "yes" to the question, "Do you smoke?" (United Press International photo by Alexis G. Glenn) Kentucky's number...
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Kentucky Continues To Lead Nation In Cancer Death Rate
Though cancer deaths rates are falling nationwide, Kentucky continues to rank worst in the country for its number of cancer deaths, The Courier-Journal's Laura Ungar has determined. (C-J graphic shows rates for the nation, Kentucky and Indiana, the...
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Heavy Smoking Less Common Than 40 Years Ago
The percentage of people who smoked 20 or more cigarettes a day decreased significantly from 1965 to 2007 in the United States, according to a study in the March 16 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. There was also a decline in...
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