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Are You Uninsured? |
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"Every gun that is made, every warship
launched, every rocket fired signifies, in
the final sense, a theft from those who
hunger and are not fed, those who are cold
and are not clothed."
-Dwight D. Eisenhower |
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TOBACCO PREVENTION PROGRAM |
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Tobacco
Prevention Home ·
Tobacco
Education Task Force ·
SWAT
Cessation Services ·
Tobacco Free Schools of Excellence
Johnson County
Smoke-Free Dining & Entertainment
Tobacco Facts ·
Newsletter
· Agency
Contacts ·
Links |
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Tobacco Facts |
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The Nation’s
Number One Killer
Tobacco is the
leading preventable cause of death in the United
States, claiming over 430,000 lives every year.
That represents more deaths than aids, alcohol,
illegal drugs, car accidents, murders, suicides,
and fires combined. Nicotine is the addictive
drug found in tobacco products. When someone
becomes addicted to cigarettes or spit tobacco
it is due to their chemical dependence on nicotine,
a drug considered to be as addictive as heroine
and cocaine.
The Truth
About Secondhand Smoke
Secondhand smoke
alone is known to be harmful to human health.
The following facts provide evidence of the true
dangers of secondhand smoke. For more
information, visit
www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/secondhandsmoke/
- Secondhand
smoke, also called Involuntary Smoking,
Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS), or Passive
Smoke, is a combination of the smoke in the air
from a burning cigarette, cigar, or pipe (side
stream smoke) and the smoke exhaled by a person
smoking (main stream smoke).
- Secondhand
smoke causes an estimated 53,000 deaths annually
in the United States alone, including 3,000 lung
cancer deaths, more than 2,000 SIDS deaths and
more than 35,000 deaths from coronary heart
disease.
- Just thirty
minutes of exposure to secondhand smoke can
compromise the cardiovascular system of
nonsmokers by reducing blood flow to the
heart.
- Secondhand
smoke contains more than 4,000 chemicals,
including arsenic, formaldehyde, hydrogen
cyanide and radioactive elements. More than 60
of these chemicals have been identified as
carcinogens.
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Secondhand Smoke has
been identified as a Group A carcinogen
(cancer-causing substance) like asbestos by
the Environmental Protection Agency. There
is no safe level of exposure to Group A
carcinogens.
- The U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services National
Toxicology Program identified secondhand smoke
as a carcinogen in their 2000 Environmental
Health Information Service 9th Report on
Carcinogens.
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Research shows that
smoke-filled rooms may have up to six times
the air pollution of a busy highway.
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Accordingly, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
estimates that 300,000 children under 1-1/2
years of age get bronchitis or pneumonia
from breathing secondhand tobacco smoke,
resulting is as many as 15,000
hospitalizations.
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Spit
Tobacco – Smokeless does not mean Harmless
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For more
information on the dangers of spit tobacco log
onto
www.throughwithchew.com
Wyoming adult
males use spit tobacco at a rate that is almost
double the national average. 14.8 percent chew
compared to 8 percent nationally (BRFSS, 2003).
In Wyoming, 21.1
percent of high school-aged male students report
using smokeless tobacco, compared to 9.4 percent
for males nationally. That's more than DOUBLE
the national average (YRBS, 2003; CDC
Highlights, 2001).
Wyoming has the third highest rate for female
youth spit tobacco use at 5%, behind only South
Dakota and Montana (YRBS, 2003; retrievable at
www.uwyo.edu/wysac
Final Trends Report, pg.
121).
Smokeless tobacco is associated with oral
cancers, tooth and gum disease and
cardiovascular disease. At least 28
cancer-causing chemicals have been identified in
smokeless tobacco products. This product
typically contains sand and grit that can wear
down your teeth (American Dental Association at
www.ada.org
retrieved August 10, 2005).
Smokeless tobacco users are up to 50 times more
likely to get oral cancer than non-users (S.T.O.P.
Guide, 1997; Hatsukami, D. & H Severson,
Nicotine and Tobacco Research, 1999).
The estimated portion of tobacco advertising for
Wyoming marketing last year was 43.9 Million
dollars (www.tobaccofreekids.org);
retrieved August 10, 2005).
Spit tobacco is not a safe alternative to
smoking. One out of every five deaths in Wyoming is
tobacco related. Oral cancer is a deadly form
of cancer. One in three cases of diagnosed oral
cancer results in death (Oregon Research
Institute; Vital Statistics).
Oral cancer kills quickly. The early signs of
oral cancer most frequently appear at the site
where spit tobacco is held in the mouth.
Leukoplakia, a white, leathery like patch forms
in the mouth at this site and is considered
pre-cancerous. Other early warning signs which
merit a visit to the dentist or physician
include a sore that bleeds easily and does not
heal, a lump anywhere in the mouth or neck, or
trouble chewing, swallowing, or moving the
tongue or jaw (Spit tobacco- It Is No Game;
American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck
Surgery, 2002).
The Wyoming Department of Health offers two free
services to help you quit: The Wyoming Quit
Tobacco Program at (800) QUIT-NOW, a program
providing free or reduced cost Nicotine
Replacement Therapy (NRT) as well as a
phone-based counseling service, or the Wyoming
Quitnet at
http://wy.quitnet.com, a web-based quit
tobacco service.
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