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TOBACCO POWER POINT

TOBACCO POWER POINT. Coach Jacobs. TOBACCO 2 BELLRINGER. Many communities encourage a smoke-free environment in which people can live, work, and play. What places in your community are smoke free? List 5 benefits of a smoke free environment. SMOKING AEROBICS.

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TOBACCO POWER POINT

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  1. TOBACCO POWER POINT Coach Jacobs

  2. TOBACCO 2 BELLRINGER Many communities encourage a smoke-free environment in which people can live, work, and play. What places in your community are smoke free? List 5 benefits of a smoke free environment.

  3. SMOKING AEROBICS • Purpose of Activity:The purpose of this activity is to show how smoking tobacco affects a person's everyday physical activity. • Materials Needed:Straws, steps for aerobics, pulse meters or stethoscopes.

  4. I. Step Aerobics: Do a ten minute step aerobic routine that gets your heart rate up. II. Using the stethoscopes check your heart rate. III. Write any two factors you know about smoking. Write down your two most favorite physical activities. IV. Smoking Aerobics: Each student volunteer will have a straw and a step. You will do the same exact aerobics routine from the beginning of class. The difference is that you will be using straws to breathe in and out. The straws represent how a smoker feels when doing physical activity. DIRECTIONS

  5. V. Check your heart rate again to see if there is a difference compared to the first time. VI. Write two feeling words you experienced when doing aerobics while breathing through the straw. How can smoking affect your two favorite physical activities you wrote down in question two? MORE STUFF

  6. Tobacco • Around 114,000 people die every year as a result of smoking-related illnesses. Cigarettes contain around 4000 different chemicals, either gases or particles - the most additive of which is nicotine. Nicotine reaches the brain within 20 seconds and creates a dependency. All cigarettes sold now carry a prominent health warning.  

  7. FACTS ABOUT TAR • Tar is a carcinogen (causes cancer). • Only after the person quits smoking will the tar start to leave the lungs (up to 15 years). • The lungs of anyone who spends time with a smoker are exposed to high levels of tar. • Reduced-tar cigarettes and filtered cigarettes do not reduce the risk of cancer.

  8. TOBACCO DEATH LIST • Formaldehyde • Antifreeze • Rat poison (Cyanide/arsenic) • Plutonium 20 (Atomic Bomb explosion) • Toluene (Mortuary) • Cadmium (Artist’s oil paints) • Benzene (Jar of rubber cement)

  9. View the jar of tar and answer the following questions: • In your group, design a poster illustrating some of the known carcinogens in cigarettes. You have 10 minutes and you may want to refer to page 541 in your text. • How does smoking marijuana produce tar effects similar to or different from smoking tobacco?

  10. EXAMPLES:

  11. Nicotine: a powerful and fast-acting addictive drug Carbon monoxide: poisonous gas given off by car exhausts Tar: black, sticky liquid like that used in road surfacing Ammonia: found in toilet cleaners Cadmium: a highly poisonous metal used in batteries Vinyl chloride: used to make PVC Cyanide: deadly poison used in the gas chambers Formaldehyde: used for preserving dead bodies Arsenic: found in rat poison Ethanol: used in anti-freeze Plus, sprinklings of 3985 other chemicals. Mix together well and smoke.

  12. Marijuana does not have a filter and therefore tar does accumulate in the lungs. Research has shown that smoking an entire marijuana joint can have the same tar effect as smoking up to 20 cigarettes. Answers

  13. DISCUSSION • How does the information about chemicals in tobacco affect your own decisions about smoking? • How does it affect your response to smoking by your peers?

  14. Stained teeth. Stale smell in hair. Stuffy nose. Lung cancer. Heart Disease. Mouth Cancer. Chronic Bronchitis. Emphysema. Stroke. Halitosis. Skin wrinkles. Deadened taste buds. Damaged Cilia. Irritated throat. Increased Heartbeat. Stained Yellow Fingers. Less oxygen to lungs. Odor of smoke in clothes. What Smoking Can Do For You!

  15. Mouth sores Cancer of the cheek, mouth, tongue, lips Lip stains. Discolored teeth. Increase risk of pharyngealcancer and esophageal cancer. Halitosis (bad breath) Destruction of gums. What Chewing Tobacco Can Do For You!

  16. Other effects of smoking • Affects sense of smell and taste • Ages skin and causes wrinkles • Dental hygiene problems, stains fingers and teeth • Wounds take longer to heal • Experience more asthma and respiratory symptoms • Makes hair and clothes smell

  17. Smoking during pregnancy Is very dangerous and leads to an increased risk of:   • miscarriage • premature birth • low weight of babies at birth

  18. Passive smoking • Inhaling other peoples' cigarette smoke is called passive smoking. Passive smoking has been linked with the following health problems in adults:   • increased sensitivity • reduced lung function in people with chest problem • increases severity of asthma • causes irritation of the eye, nose and throat

  19. In children passive smoking increases the risk of:   • respiratory infection • asthma symptoms • wheezing and • chronic coughs

  20. Asthma Asthma is inflammation of the bronchioles, which constricts them and makes it difficult for air to pass through. More mucus is secreted which blocks the tiny air tubes or bronchioles. Asthma

  21. The air sacs (alveoli) in someone with emphysema lose their elasticity and form. The capillaries that surround the air sacs break apart. The destruction of the capillaries and the air sacs prevent the exchange of oxygen for carbon dioxide from occurring effectively. Emphysema

  22. Bronchitis is an inflammation of the bronchial tubes, the part of the respiratory system that leads into the lungs. Bronchitis

  23. Leukoplakia is a condition in which thickened, white patches form on your gums, on the inside of your cheeks and sometimes on your tongue. These patches can't easily be scraped off. Leukoplakia

  24. All the blood in your body passes through the lungs. This allows the red blood cells to absorb oxygen and release carbon dioxide. The lungs are made up of a number of structures that allow the exchange of gases and prevent infection. Diagram the lungs, and show the various parts and their functions. Demonstrate how inhalation of tobacco smoke affects each function, and explain how this might affect related systems, particularly circulation. DIAGRAM THE LUNGS

  25. You should be able to outline the basic systems down to the aveoli and show how the presence of foreign substances impedes gas exchange and cause excess mucous productions. Your diagram

  26. Worsened shortness of breath that causes the patient to breathe faster and harder. This is the most common and distressing acute symptom. Increased volume of sputum Sputum is thicker and darker. ANSWER

  27. EXIT SLIP • 1. Nicotine • A. is more addictive than heroin • B. decreases the heart rate and blood pressure • C. enhances the taste buds • D. dilates the blood vessels. • 2. Nicotine dependence causes • A. heart palpitations and increased appetite • B. anxiety, irritability, headaches, and restlessness • C. people to experiment with other drugs • D. premature death. • 3. Smoking during pregnancy causes • A. Premature deliveries • B. low birth weight • C. infant deaths • D. all the above. • 4. The first stage of an alcohol treatment program usually is • A. withdrawal symptoms • B. detoxification • C. outpatient care • D. inpatient care.

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