Study: Smokers Have Lower IQs Than Non-Smokers

@laglen (19759)
United States
February 23, 2010 12:39pm CST
[b]NEW YORK — Cigarette smokers have lower IQs than non-smokers, and the more a person smokes, the lower their IQ, a study in over 20,000 Israeli military recruits suggests. Young men who smoked a pack of cigarettes a day or more had IQ scores 7.5 points lower than non-smokers, Dr. Mark Weiser of Sheba Medical Center in Tel Hashomer and his colleagues found. "Adolescents with poorer IQ scores might be targeted for programs designed to prevent smoking," they conclude in the journal Addiction. While there is evidence for a link between smoking and lower IQ, many studies have relied on intelligence tests given in childhood, and have also included people with mental and behavioral problems, who are both more likely to smoke and more likely to have low IQs, Weiser and his team note in their report. To better understand the smoking-IQ relationship, the researchers looked at 20,211 18-year-old men recruited into the Israeli military. The group did not include anyone with major mental health problems, because these individuals are disqualified from military service. According to the investigators, 28 percent of the study participants smoked at least one cigarette a day, around 3 percent said they were ex-smokers, and 68 percent had never smoked. The smokers had significantly lower intelligence test scores than non-smokers, and this remained true even after the researchers accounted for socioeconomic status as measured by how many years of formal education a recruit's father had completed. The average IQ for non-smokers was about 101, while it was 94 for men who had started smoking before entering the military. IQ steadily dropped as the number of cigarettes smoked increased, from 98 for people who smoked one to five cigarettes daily to 90 for those who smoked more than a pack a day. IQ scores from 84 to 116 are considered to indicate average intelligence. Recruits aren't allowed to smoke while intelligence tests are administered, the researchers note, so it's possible that withdrawal symptoms might affect smokers' scores. To address this issue, they also looked at IQ scores for men who were non-smokers when they were 18 but started smoking during their military service. These men also scored lower than never-smokers (97 points, on average), "indicating that nicotine withdrawal was probably not the cause of the difference," the researchers say. The researchers also compared IQs for 70 pairs of brothers in the group in which one brother smoked and the other did not. Again, average IQs for the non-smoking sibling were higher than for the smokers. The findings suggest that lower IQ individuals are more likely to choose to smoke, rather than that smoking makes people less intelligent, Weiser and his team conclude.[/b] Wow! I sher cud be smart! How about you? Do you smoke? Do you feel dumber after each cigarette?
1 person likes this
5 responses
@wmraul (2552)
• Bucharest, Romania
23 Feb 10
I strongly doubt. Yet, after all, no surprise. I have seen several times IQ tests which have included inside eyes tests ..
1 person likes this
@laglen (19759)
• United States
24 Feb 10
I really do not believe these studies and I think if more were performed or other results were released, the results would change.
@laglen (19759)
• United States
1 Mar 10
i think that number may be wrong......
@wmraul (2552)
• Bucharest, Romania
25 Feb 10
Exactly. As I said above, many tests are not quite ok or some are wrong with intention. And anyway, you know, 73.67% of all statistics are wrong
1 person likes this
@sid556 (30953)
• United States
25 Feb 10
I really can't agree on that survey. For one thing many smokers became addicted long before there was so much information out there as to why it was so bad for you. I'm one of them. I began smoking when I was 10 back in the 60's. I know many very intelligent people who smoke. I do wonder about those that pick up the habit now with all that is known on the subject as well as the ever-rising cost. Still not convinced that it has a lot to do with IQ. It is usually teens out to try things and thinking they are above becoming addicted.
1 person likes this
@laglen (19759)
• United States
25 Feb 10
True but IQ is just a number explaining potential, not actually what you know or how you apply it.
@sid556 (30953)
• United States
25 Feb 10
Very true.
1 person likes this
@dipak06 (913)
• India
23 Feb 10
i dont smoke...i dont like actually smoking....but i have a wrong conception about smoking....many people who smoke give excuse that they will get enthusiasm after smoking...is it true??i dont think///what do you say???
1 person likes this
@laglen (19759)
• United States
24 Feb 10
lol I would have to go with the relaxing. What kind of smoking are you referring to?
@lowloy (316)
• United States
23 Feb 10
Studies are done on a sample of the population. If they tried to everyone it would be a census. Samples give an estimated range of what their study concludes. The researchers that did this study tried to rank the population accordingly to their study, which would be an estimated guess. This is what they came up with. This is on target for some and way off for others. We are who we are and a study like this won't realy change anything. It will probably only change a person's emotions for those that read this, and that will probably be for the bad.
1 person likes this
@laglen (19759)
• United States
24 Feb 10
well said thank you
@hofferp (4734)
• United States
23 Feb 10
I smoke and I have a way-above-average IQ. According to this, if I didn't smoke I'd be an Einstein genius...
1 person likes this
@laglen (19759)
• United States
24 Feb 10
lol me too. Its a good thing we hold it back!