More smokers in Mansfield are kicking the habit

Smoking rates have fallen in Mansfield in the last – but still remain above the national average.
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By contrast, smoking rates have risen in Ashfield where the proportion of smokers is well above the national average.

Campaign group Action on Smoking and Health says smoking remains the leading cause of premature death in the UK, and that there is a long way to go before the country is truly smoke-free.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) estimates 18.8 per cent of adults in Mansfield smoked in 2019.

The number of smokers has fallen in Mansfield but risen in Ashfield in the last yearThe number of smokers has fallen in Mansfield but risen in Ashfield in the last year
The number of smokers has fallen in Mansfield but risen in Ashfield in the last year

This was an decrease on the year before, when 23.1 per cent of those aged 18 and over smoked.

In Ashfield, 19.8 per cent of adults smoked, up from 16.6 per cent a year earlier.

Across the rest of the UK, the proportion of smokers has fallen every year since 2011, reaching a record low of 14.1 per cent in 2019.

Across England, the rate now stands at 13.9 per cent – the lowest of all four countries in the UK.

Deborah Arnott, chief executive of ASH, said: “The year-on-year decline in the proportion of people smoking has continued so only one in seven people now smoke, the lowest ever recorded.

"But that means there are 6.9 million smokers, and smoking remains the leading cause of premature death in the UK killing nearly 100,000 people a year, with 30 times as many living with serious smoking-related diseases.

"We’ve still got a long way to go before this country is truly smoke-free.”

The ONS estimates a further 26.2 per cent of adults in Mansfield, and 30.9 per cent Ashfield have quit smoking, withe remainder in both areas saying they had never done so.

Men and women were equally as likely to smoke in Mansfield, both making up 18.8 per cent each of the town’s smokers, while men were more likely to smoke than women in Ashfield – 20.6 per cent of males compared to 19.2 per cent of females.

.A Department of Health and Social Care spokesman said England's smoking rate of 13.9 per cent was one of the best in Europe, but is still short of the Government's 2017 tobacco control plan of 12 per cent or less.

They added: “The UK is recognised internationally for its tough regulatory approach on tobacco control and reducing smoking harms.

“However, we are not complacent and our ambition is for England to become a smoke-free society by 2030.”