Lung Cancer Awareness
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death and the second most common cancer among both men and women in the United States.
The most important thing you can do to lower your lung cancer risk is to quit smoking and avoid secondhand smoke. For help quitting, visit smokefree.gov, call 1 (800) QUIT-NOW (784-8669), or text “QUIT” to 47848 from your cell phone.
What You Can Do to Lower Your Risk
You can help lower your risk of lung cancer in the following ways—
- Don’t smoke. The most important thing you can do to prevent lung cancer is to not start smoking, or to quit if you smoke.
- Avoid secondhand smoke. Smoke from other people’s cigarettes, pipes, or cigars is called secondhand smoke. Make your home and car smoke-free.
- Get your home tested for radon. The second leading cause of lung cancer is radon, a naturally occurring gas that comes from rocks and dirt and can get trapped in houses and buildings.
Fast Facts
- Each year, about 200,000 people in the United States are told they have lung cancer and more than 150,000 people die from this disease.
- About 80% to 90% of lung cancers are linked with cigarette smoking.
- When a person breathes in secondhand smoke, it is like he or she is smoking. In the United States, about 7,300 people who never smoked die from lung cancer due to secondhand smoke every year.
- After increasing for decades, lung cancer rates are decreasing nationally, as fewer people smoke cigarettes.
- Smoking can cause cancer almost anywhere in the body. Smoking causes cancer of the mouth and throat, esophagus, stomach, colon, rectum, liver, pancreas, voicebox (larynx), trachea, bronchus, kidney and renal pelvis, urinary bladder, and cervix, and causes acute myeloid leukemia.
- Screening is recommended for people at high risk of getting lung cancer because of their smoking history and age. Ask your doctor if lung cancer screening is right for you. Lung cancer screening is not a substitute for quitting smoking.
Featured Resources
Our lung cancer infographicexplains how to lower your risk.
A non-smoker shares her story about being diagnosed with lung cancer in this podcast.
CDC Expert Commentary on Medscape: Early Detection Means It’s a Promising Time for Lung Cancer
This article about lung cancer[PDF-69KB] is free to use in any publication.
Test your knowledge about lung cancer with this simple quiz!
Share our lung cancer images on your Web site, social network profile, or blog!
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