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Men could make themselves richer and a lot healthier by cutting back on a few vices, says a

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released Monday by the Canadian Men’s Health Foundation.

Knowing the personal financial costs of smoking, excessive drinking and being overweight should give men another motivation to make changes for the better, says Dr. Larry Goldenberg, a professor of urology at the University of British Columbia, who founded the non-profit group two years ago.

“Men are risk takers more than women … Women drink, women smoke, women are fat, but men are worse. It’s that difference that’s costing us a lot and that we’re trying to address,” he says.

The report calculates how much extra cash men would have if they didn’t smoke, drink or weigh too much and instead invested that money along with the cost of higher insurance premiums. The results are staggering, turning paupers into millionaires. (See graphic.)