It has the greatest impact on heart health, lower death rate
Reposted at http://www.tobaccodeathray.blogspot.com posted at http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/tobacco_unfiltered/post/2013_06_04_heart on June 5, 2013
It’s no news flash that exercise, eating healthy and watching your weight are
all good for your heart – and that smoking is most decidedly not.
But a new study published by the American Journal of Epidemiology
underscores the huge benefits of adopting heart-healthy behaviors, and shows
that not smoking has the greatest benefit of all.
The study found that adopting four healthy behaviors – not smoking, regular
exercise, eating a Mediterranean-style diet and keeping a normal weight –
protected against coronary heart disease and reduced the chance of death from
all causes by 80 percent over an eight-year period.
“Of all the lifestyle factors, we found that
smoking avoidance played the largest role in reducing the risk of coronary heart
disease and mortality,” said Dr. Roger Blumenthal, a cardiologist and professor of
medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, who was the senior
author of the study.
“In fact, if you exercised, ate healthily, and
maintained normal weight, but smoked, you still were worse off than people who
did nothing else right but stayed away from cigarettes,” said Dr. Haitham Ahmed,
the lead investigator.
“This really highlighted how important it is to stay away from smoking. It is
probably singlehandedly the best thing you can do for your cardiovascular and
overall health,” Dr. Ahmed added.
Researchers evaluated data on more than 6,200 U.S. men and women, age 44-84,
from white, African-American, Hispanic and Chinese backgrounds. All were
followed for an average of 7.6 years
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