Western Mail

UK smoking rate second lowest in Europe after 25% fall among young adults

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SMOKING rates across the UK continue to fall, with a sharp decline since 2010 among younger people, figures show.

In 2016, 15.8% of adults in the UK smoked, down from 17.2% in 2015, the data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed.

Some 15.5% of adults currently smoke in England, rising to 18.1% in Northern Ireland, 17.7% in Scotland and 16.9% in Wales.

Across the UK, 5.6% of people – around 2.9 million – used e-cigarettes in 2016.

Duncan Selbie, chief executive of Public Health England, said there were now more than half a million fewer smokers in England than in 2015. He said the UK now has the second lowest smoking Europe after Sweden.

He added: “What is really fantastic news is that this steep decline is even greater among young adults (aged 18 to 24), where smoking has fallen by a staggering quarter since 2010, reversing a long trend.”

In 2010, 26% of this age group smoked, dropping to 19% in 2016. rates in

Mr Selbie said: “It’s now hard to believe that back in 1974 almost half of adults smoked. But now an end really is in sight and we have a real opportunit­y to virtually eliminate all the harm, misery and death caused by smoking.”

Dr Penny Woods, chief executive of the British Lung Foundation, said: “People who quit live longer and feel better, no matter their age. However we must not be complacent. Smoking is still the UK’s biggest cause of early preventabl­e death.

“Approximat­ely 100,000 people die needlessly from smoking-related diseases every year in our hospitals – it’s time to tackle the human and financial cost the tobacco industry creates.”

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