Secondhand smoke cause lung cancer among non-smoking women

China Plus Published: 2018-04-16 13:47:22
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[Photo: from VCG]

[Photo: from VCG]

China reported over 3.8 million new cancer cases last year, about seven cases a minute and, surprisingly, women who don't smoke can also get lung cancer due to their exposure to secondhand smoke and cooking oil fumes.

The report by the China Cancer Center complied data from China's 31 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions, and it suggests that lung cancer is still the most frequently occurring malignancy in the country. Cigarette smoking has been identified as a risk factor for lung cancer, but studies have shown a rapidly increasing incidence of lung cancer among female non-smokers.

Liang Chaoyang, vice director of the Department of Thoracic Surgery at Beijing's China Japan Friendship Hospital, said cooking methods, the influence of second or third-hand smoke and environmental pollution were behind the rise of lung cancer among women.

Liang also said more than 700 million women and children in China had long been exposed to secondhand smoke both at home and in public spaces, making China the worst place in the world for secondhand smoke.

About 55 percent of females aged over 15 were exposed to secondhand smoke at home on a daily basis. Some cancer experts have warned that putting someone else in the way of secondhand smoke was not only selfish and immoral, but also equated to committing slow murder.

[The audio clip is from Studio+, produced by CRI] 

(Source: Ecns.cn)

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