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Knud Juel National Institute of
Public Health, DK-2100, Copenhagen, Denmark
kj{at}dike.dk
Even at the beginning of the 1950s, the prevalence of
smoking among Danish women was as high as 40%.1 In the
1980s the proportion of men and women who smoked cigarettes in Denmark
was almost the same, which is unusual. Data from interviews and
questionnaires showed that the proportion of heavy smokers had
increased steadily among women over a long period: 1% (1953), 7%
(1970), 12% (1980), 15% (1987), and 18% (1994). At the beginning of
the 1990s, Danish women had the highest prevalence of smoking in the 87 countries in which smoking among women was recorded.2 The
life expectancy of Danish women is shorter than that of women in other
western European countries.3 Mortality from lung cancer
and chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases among Danish women has
increased greatly from the 1960s and is now by far the highest in
Europe.3 To assess the impact of smoking on mortality
among Danish women, we performed a register based study for the period
1951-95.
We calculated mortality attributable to tobacco use by Peto et
al's method.4 They compared the death rates from lung
cancer in a study population with those of a US group to derive an
estimate of smoking rates in the study population (more lung cancer
meant more smoking). They assumed that certain relative risks for
smoking and important diseases related to smoking applied to all
populations. These two sets of assumed statistics were then used to
calculate population attributable risks for each of the major causes of death in each population.
Data on deaths and causes of death in Denmark are available in the
Cause of Death Register of the National Institute of Public Health,
which covers all deaths in Denmark since 1943. The data on deaths in
other countries of Europe were derived from the World Health
Organization's database.
The figure shows the risk of death among Danish women aged 55-84 since
the beginning of the 1950s. The risk of mortality from any cause
declined until the start of the 1970s and then increased slightly. In
the absence of deaths attributed to smoking, the decline would have
continued. The risk of dying of tobacco attributed causes increased
steadily, from less than 1% of all deaths at the beginning of the
1950s to about 25% of all deaths 40 years later.
Since the 1970s, Danish women in some age groups have experienced
increasing numbers of deaths. This can be explained by the longstanding
heavy use of tobacco.
The risk of dying of causes attributed to tobacco is still
highest among men, but it is the trend among women that is of
most concern. Denmark is one of the few countries in which the
estimated annual mortality from smoking is almost identical for men and women.
No country has yet experienced the full impact of smoking on
women's health,5 but there is now strong evidence that
when women have smoked cigarettes regularly for several decades the percentage of deaths attributable to tobacco approaches that of men.4 This situation has almost been reached in Denmark,
and the trend may be a forerunner of a development that has begun or
will begin in other European countries.
Danish life expectancy cannot be improved greatly without a
substantial reduction in tobacco consumption. Furthermore, the present
high proportion of smokers among adult Danes will continue to affect
the mortality pattern far into this century. Clearly, if it
were not for tobacco, Danish women would have experienced a
considerable reduction in mortality.
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Methods and results
Top
Methods and results
Comment
References

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Trends in age standardised mortality (per 100 000, world
standard) for deaths attributed to smoking and to causes other than
smoking among women aged 55-84 in Denmark, 1951-95
![]()
Comment
Top
Methods and results
Comment
References
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Acknowledgments |
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Contributors: KJ is the sole author of this paper.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: The study was supported by grants from the Danish Ministry of Health.
Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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| 1. | Hamtoft H, Lindhardt M. Tobacco consumption in Denmark. Dan Med Bull 1955; 2: 213-220. |
| 2. | World Health Organization. Tobacco or health. A global status report. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1997. |
| 3. |
Juel K, Bjerregaard P, Madsen M.
Mortality and life expectancy in Denmark and in other European countries: what is happening to middle-aged Danes?
Eur J Public Health
2000;
10:
93-100 |
| 4. | Peto R, Lopez AD, Boreham J, Thun M, Heath C. Mortality from tobacco in developed countries: indirect estimation from national vital statistics. Lancet 1992; 339: 1268-1278[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 5. |
Amos A.
Women and smoking.
Br Med Bull
1996;
52:
74-89 |
(Accepted 26 June 2000)