A study looked at where chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) occurs in the United States and whether it follows similar patterns among different groups of people based on their smoking history. The research examined U.S. adults in 2017, including current smokers, former smokers, and people who had never smoked.
The main finding was that the geographic and sociodemographic patterns of COPD prevalence were similar across all three smoking status groups. This means that areas with higher COPD rates tended to have higher rates regardless of whether residents were current smokers, former smokers, or never-smokers.
It's important to understand that this was an observational study using 2017 data, which means it can show patterns but cannot prove what causes them. The researchers did not report statistical measures or effect sizes, so we don't know how strong these patterns are. Readers should view this as early information about how COPD is distributed geographically, not as proof of what causes the disease.