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Smoking Trumps Other Social Determinants of Health Impacting Mortality

Income was another key social determinant of health affecting mortality, but smoking even as a high-income person can reduce life expectancy.

smoking leading social determinant of health affecting mortality

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By Sara Heath

- Smoking was the leading social determinant of health affecting mortality and life expectancy, although income was another strong SDOH predictor, according to researchers from the Center for Population Health at Georgetown University and the Department of Sociology at UC Riverside.

The study, published in JAMA Network Open, revealed that people who had never smoked were 37 percentage points more likely to live until at least age 85 than those who had smoked in their lifetime. In contrast, folks with more than $300,000 in assets were 19 percentage points more likely to live until age 85 compared to those with no assets at all.

Even a rich person couldn’t shake the detrimental effects of smoking, the researchers pointed out.