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When you stop smoking, your lungs start to heal — right away. The American Cancer Society offers hopeful reasons to quit.
While quitting is one of the most important things you can do to lower your risk of lung cancer, there are other important steps you can take. Research shows a lung cancer screening can make a big difference in heavy cigarette smokers and former cigarette smokers.
Lung cancer is stealthy. Often, there aren’t any symptoms until it has spread. After you quit, your risk for lung cancer stays elevated for 15 years. That’s why it’s important for smokers to quit as soon as possible.
For heavy, long-term current and former smokers, one screening is proving to be an important tool in the fight against lung cancer. Studies show that low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) scans are effective in detecting lung cancer early when it can be more successfully managed.
Non-invasive LDCT scans look for tell-tale lesions on the lungs. If a lesion is found, more invasive testing is used to see if it is lung cancer. Researchers reveal LDCT lowers the risk of dying in heavy smokers.
The American Lung Association says the LDCT is most effective in people who meet these criteria:
Sometimes an LCDT scan detects a lesion that additional testing finds is not cancer. To minimize this risk, LDCT screening is limited to those at high risk.
Be proactive. Take these steps to protect your lungs and fight lung cancer.
Be honest about your smoking history. If you smoke now, smoked a pack a day for 20 years, or two packs a day for 10 years, get screened.
Get screened even if you’ve stopped smoking. You’re still at risk if you smoked one or two packs a day in the last 15 years.
Ask for the right kind of screening. Talk with your doctor about LDCT screening. Your doctor can advise you about your risk and whether it’s right for you. A doctor must refer you for an LDCT lung scan.
Keep it up. Experts advise smokers and former smokers between the ages of 50 and 80 to be tested each year. Screening should continue until 15 years have passed since the last cigarette — or until age of 80.
Do you smoke and want to quit? Take advantage of Quitting Tobacco — a free program on the Well onTarget® portal. You’ll find interactive lessons, tips and tools to help you kick start your quit and stay strong. Designed to help you understand the complex factors that swirl around nicotine use, you’ll learn how to make positive lifestyle changes that put smoking in the rear-view mirror. Sign up on wellontarget.com to take the first step.
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