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Archive for the ‘Passive Smoking’ Category

Smoking Allergies Among Kids

Thursday, March 29th, 2019

The severe detrimental effects of passive smoking on Maltese children can no longer be questioned now that hard evidence is available for the first time to substantiate these concerns. A study by Maltese doctors has finally established that cigarette smoking plays a major role in the significant problem schoolchildren have with allergic conditions.

And if mothers were worried about smoking during pregnancy because of its effects on their unborn children, they should be equally worried about doing so in the first year of their lives, warned one of the authors, consultant respiratory physician Stephen Montefort.

The study found that 31 per cent of five- to eight-year-olds were passive smokers, followed by 51 per cent of 13- to 15-year-olds – in both age groups their father was more likely to be the smoker. The child’s first year of life is vital, according to the research, part of the International Study on Asthma and other Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC). Children were more likely to be wheezers if their mothers smoked in their first year.

The study also shows the developing lung is more affected given that, if the mother smokes in the first year of life, the child seems to suffer more.

Looking at about 8,000 schoolchildren, it provides unprecedented concrete evidence that passive smoking in the home and personal smoking in teenagers already “really affects” allergic conditions in children.

Prof. Montefort’s main message is that the evidence is no longer anecdotal, so an even stronger argument can be used to stop parents from smoking.

“Mothers are concerned about harming their babies in their womb but they are not really worried about them when they are born. They should continue worrying,” Prof. Montefort insisted.


Tobacco Free Week in Florida

Thursday, March 29th, 2019

Each year, Tobacco Free Florida Week is an opportunity to educate and empower Floridians about relevant issues related to tobacco use inthe state. This year’s focal point, secondhand smoke (SHS), is one of the issues that affects every single Floridian, according to a press release from Tobacco Free Florida. The fourth annual Tobacco Free Florida Week runs from March 26 through April 1.

Themed “Fresh Air for All,” the week’s events and messaging highlight the progress made in protecting Floridians from the harmful effects of SHS and look to the challenges ahead, as SHS continues to impact Florida’s health.

Secondhand Smoke

Despite the substantial decrease in smokers inthe stateand the growing trend of smoke-free policies — both indoors and out — many of Florida’s most vulnerable are still involuntarily affected by SHS’s harmful chemicals, hundreds of which are toxic and almost 70 are proven to cause cancer. Each year, approximately 2,520 non-smoking adults in Florida die primarily from exposure to SHS.

Whatthe State’s Surgeon General has to say:

“We are committed to protecting Floridians, especially children who sometimes do not have a voice. One of the most crucial ways to protect yourself and your loved ones from the dangers of SHS is to maintain a 100 percent smoke-free home,” said Dr. Frank Farmer, Florida’s State Surgeon General. “While a home should always be a safe place for children, the fact is that the primary place young children breathe SHS is in their own homes.

Outside of the home:

Florida residents benefit from Florida’s Clean Indoor Air Act (FCIAA), which was amended in 2003 to protect people from exposure to SHS and prohibit smoking in indoor workplaces. While the FCIAA protects many, countless Floridians are involuntarily exposed to the dangers of SHS in the nightlife industry, construction and other blue-collar industries while making a living and providing for their families.

The bottom line is that there is no risk-free level of exposure to SHS. Even breathing SHS for short periods of time, like at a bar or a nightclub, can be dangerous. When you breathe SHS, tobacco smoke immediately seeps into the bloodstream and changes its chemistry so that the blood becomes stickier, allowing clots to form that can cause major blockages in already narrowed arteries. Damage to the heart can be significant, if not deadly.

 


Smoking Hot Theme in Indiana

Friday, March 9th, 2019

A recent poll from the American Cancer Society suggests that smoking is a hot topic in Indiana, with market research indicating that 70 percent of residents would be in favor of law banning smoking in most public places. WNDU reports that the survey results, run by Marketing Informatics of Indianapolis, varied across voting districts, but that the majority of voters support instituting a ban with no limitations, while a smaller group would like there to be some exemptions.

A separate announcement by the ACS discussed a recent report from the Surgeon General, Preventing Tobacco use Among Youth and Young Adults, which struck out at the “influential marketing messages” that tobacco manufacturers use to target teenagers.

“This report highlights the urgent need to employ proven methods nationwide that prevent young people from smoking and encourage all smokers to quit,” stated John R. Seffrin, chief executive officer of the American Cancer Society and the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN).

Smoking has been a smoldering topic in other parts of the Midwest as well. In January, The Plain Dealer reported that Ohio had gotten a failing grade from the American Lung Association in its State of Tobacco Control report. The group noted that the state had not invested any of its own money in smoking prevention through advertising and education programs, the newspaper reported.

College Campus Smoking Still Smother

Tuesday, March 6th, 2019

Walking around Boston College’s beautiful campus, it is not hard to find some traces of litter that can tell us a lot about the students at BC. Most interestingly, on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday mornings, these things that were left behind are particularly illuminating of the night that was had. Whether they be a sad pile of fallen mozzarella sticks from Late Night, a crushed Natty can, or scattered cigarette butts, these all are little clues of the happenings on campus. Though the Natty and mozzarella sticks usually are only weekend indulgences, smoking is one habit that creeps into the everyday lives of many college students. Is it something that we notice, or even bat an eye at? Walking across campus, how many smokers do we see on a daily basis?

The prevalence of smoking on BC’s campus is widely debated. According to Josh Dutton, A&S ’14, “I don’t think many people smoke on campus.” This seems to be a commonly-held belief. Students don’t often look at BC as a school filled with smokers. It’s just not a way they would categorize their undergraduate population. But it is something that calls for our attention. No one in our generation can claim that they have never heard that smoking is bad for them. There are tons of campaigns geared toward getting this message across to people, and revealing the gruesome diseases and health problems that can come along with this habit. So the question stands: Why, if we know how harmful smoking is, do college students still continue to light up?

According to research done by the Harvard School of Public Health, one third of college students reported using tobacco products within the last four weeks, and half reported using them within the past year. What is it about the college atmosphere that seems to permit smoking? “I think that students smoke because they are stressed out and need it to relax and take the edge off,” Dutton says. This seems to be a common belief, and is supported by the fact that there seems to be a larger gathering of smokers outside of O’Neill Library than anywhere else on campus. The library, in the minds of students, is directly linked with stress, and it seems that students sometimes need to slip away from their books for a nicotine fix.

Unfortunately, this all-too-familiar scene poses larger problems than health concerns. The University’s rules and regulations are in conflict with these practices, though they seem to continue. According to University Librarian Thomas Wall, “We have had complaints about smoking at the Level Three entrance of the O’Neill Library. In response, we have posted some ‘No Smoking’ signs that are frequently ignored. Patrick Rombalski (Vice President of Student Affairs) has informed me about the 20-ft rule, but we have no means to enforce it.” According to policy, there is no smoking permitted inside BC buildings, or within 20 feet of them, something that Wall clearly struggles with at the library.

There is a University smoking policy that dates back to August 2003, searchable on bc.edu that states, “Environmental Protection Agency underscored the health risks of secondhand, or passive, smoke by linking this type of smoke to 3,000 lung cancer deaths per year, and by classifying secondhand smoke as a Class A known human carcinogen. Smoking can also be a cause of annoyance, physical discomfort, and mental stress, particularly for those who suffer allergic or chronic reactions to smoke and other impurities in the air. The purpose of this policy is to provide reasonable protection to the health of all members of the Boston College community from the effects of tobacco smoke.”

Smoking Cigarettes Extended Among Teens

Monday, March 5th, 2019

best karelia cigarette onlineThis is a national day of activism for youths worldwide to take a stand and speak out against big tobacco. If we can keep our youths from ever trying tobacco, there is a greater chance they will never become one of the 4,400 people who die each year in Colorado as a result of tobacco use. About 90 percent of adult tobacco users began before they were 18 years old. Tobacco use is a burden for everyone — not only for the individual’s health and related expenses, but also for the entire state, which pays $1.3 billion for smoking-related health costs each year.

Children and teens can be easily influenced by tobacco companies through movies, advertising, friends and other sources. Teens may not realize how addictive nicotine is and are often unaware of the serious health consequences they might face over time. Tobacco use leads to cancer, heart disease, emphysema, osteoporosis, infertility, hypertension and early wrinkling and skin changes.

Unfortunately, Pueblo’s youth rates for tobacco use are higher than the state’s rates: 19 percent of Pueblo youths smoke, compared to 11.9 percent for Colorado; 14.6 percent of Pueblo youths chew tobacco, compared to 7.4 percent for Colorado; and 26.6 percent of Pueblo youths smoke cigars, compared to 15 percent for Colorado.

Tobacco companies are constantly inventing new products in order to appeal to our youths and to gain new customers. Clear evidence of this is reflected in the new dissolvable tobacco products — sticks, strips and orbs. These products consist of finely ground tobacco along with highly addictive nicotine and are absorbed in the mouth. People can only speculate what other dangerous chemicals are in these products, since they are not currently regulated by the FDA.

These products, being test marketed in Colorado, can easily be hidden and used without parents or teachers knowing. They look like breath mints, strips and toothpicks, and the containers are cellphone-shaped. Young children and infants are at risk for overdose if they ingest them.

The Colorado State Board of Health, of which I am a member, passed a resolution asking R.J. Reynolds Co. to top selling cigarette products until the FDA had an opportunity to review them. Soon after, the Colorado Public Health Association and the Pueblo City-County Health Department’s Board of Health also passed similar resolutions. R.J. Reynolds immediately responded that they would not remove the products from Colorado. This sent a message from R.J. Reynolds inferring the state health board’s resolution is of no significance to them — and the health of Coloradans is not a concern.

According to the 2008 Healthy Kids Colorado Survey, three out of four high school students in Pueblo County who tried to purchase tobacco were successful.

Colorado does not require a license to sell tobacco. Requiring licenses of tobacco retailers would allow for local enforcement to educate retailers and watch for illegal sales to minors. The health department and the Pueblo Tobacco Education and Prevention Partnership’s coalition would like to eliminate illegal sales of tobacco to minors in our community and licensing can be effective.

Smoking Cigarettes Prohibited Outside Bars

Friday, February 24th, 2019

Health scientists have proposed to extend the smoking cigarettes ban to outside pub too for to stop the smoking use increase among social smokers. The recent study, published in the journal Tobacco Control, reported that smoking and drinking alcohol very often are linked together. And, while the smoking influence has declined, social smoking has raised among young people, researchers observed. Lead study, Professor Janet Hoek, of the University of Otago in New Zealand, noted: “Enforcing smoke-free outdoors bars could reduce smoking by removing signs that stimulate this bad behavior and change the places that relieve it.”

American Smokers and Nicotine Addiction

Friday, February 17th, 2019

America’s health controllers continue to kill smokers. Cigarettes smoking is the gravest danger to America’s inhabitants health — it is considers worse than obesity. Forty-six million Americans still smoke tobacco, even if smoking warnings were placed everywhere and cigarettes taxes increased.

The main goal of the health regulators is to reduce smoking tobacco which harm populations’ health. As applied in other areas of public health, the benefits of harm smokers reduction are well known: the main goal is to reduce the health results of a substance or smoking behavior without demanding full abstinence from it. For example they distribute condoms to people who are known to engage in risky sexual activity.

Statistics show that approximately two-thirds of smokers wish to quit smoking and and one-third even try to quit yearly, fewer than five per cent. Nicotine addiction is very strong among Americans smokers and an abstinence doesn’t work. Anti-smoking controllers didn’t find yet an effective method which will help smokers to quit smoking. All methods which were imposed had no positive results.

Tobacco harm reduction advocates the use of reduced-risk nicotine products, which allows addicted smokers to curtail their smoking cigarettes without forcing them to eliminate nicotine altogether — a very difficult task. Nicotine is the main reason that attract smokers into smoking: the craving for nicotine is as strong as that for heroin or even cocaine. Yet the smoking-related disease among smokers is not caused by nicotine, but by the smoking products of tobacco burning inhaled many times a day for decades. So scientists found that nicotine is very addictive, but it is not harmful for smokers health.

That explains why tobacco harm reduction saves lives. Its main goal is to lessen the devastating health risks of cigarettes. The success of this policy in Sweden over the past four decades is widely accepted — but not among America’s tunnel-visioned health regulators. Thanks to smokeless tobacco products Swedish men have the lowest smoking rate and the lowest rate of smoking-related disease and death in Europe.