Tobacco and lung cancer.

B E Johnson
Author Information
  1. B E Johnson: Department of Medicine, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas 66160, USA. bjohhnso1@kumc.edu

Abstract

Cigarette smoking is responsible for enormous health consequences. Lung cancer is fatal in over 80% of cases, and effective treatment is limited. The medical impact of cigarette smoking will diminish with effective measures to prevent smoking and nicotine addiction and to promote smoking cessation. Efforts should focus on the teenage population, with a combination of social, economic, and legislative interventions.

MeSH Term

Health Policy
Humans
Lung Neoplasms
Mass Screening
Physician's Role
Primary Health Care
Risk Factors
Smoking
Smoking Cessation
Smoking Prevention
United States

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0smokingcancereffectiveCigaretteresponsibleenormoushealthconsequencesLungfatal80%casestreatmentlimitedmedicalimpactcigarettewilldiminishmeasurespreventnicotineaddictionpromotecessationEffortsfocusteenagepopulationcombinationsocialeconomiclegislativeinterventionsTobaccolung

Similar Articles

Cited By