According to a study of more than 50,000 Norwegian smokers, reducing nicotine intake, even by up to 50 percent, does not provide significant health benefits. The mortality rate for those who cut back was not lower than that for heavier smokers, nor did the "reducers" fare any better when it came to cardiovascular disease.
Which of the following, if true, most seriously jeopardizes the findings of the study described above?
A) The majority of study participants minimized their withdrawal symptoms through the use of nicotine patches and chewing gum.
B) Many of the study’s participants periodically dined in restaurants in which smoking was permitted.
C) The study’s participants started smoking at different ages and had varied initial nicotine intake.
D) Quitting smoking entirely results in a marked reduction in the ill effects of smoking.
E) Men and women who smoked pipes and cigars were excluded from the study.
Answer is A.
I don't understand why its A per the explanation:
(A) CORRECT. This answer choice indicates that most study participants did not actually reduce their nicotine intake; instead, they simply received nicotine from different sources. Since the data on which the conclusion is based is not reliable, the conclusion is undermined.
Isn't A just saying, that for the people in the study, they help control withdraw symptoms via patches and gums. This has no relevance to to jeoparidizing the study. I thought A was simply irrelevant. Can someone help explain?