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<br>Find out more by visiting our website at https://www.csures.com.<br>
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Discover The Importance OF Research On Tobacco And Tobacco Legislation On Human Health Restrictions on smoking in public places such as restaurants, buses, trains, and so on, follow years of research and scientific evidence based on the fact that smoking tobacco products are harmful to human health. The best way to take care of yourself and save your health if you are a smoker is of course to quit smoking, but for many smokers who are addicted to nicotine, this is one of the hardest things to do. Tobacco consumption in any form increases the risk of cancer of the mouth, oesophagus, lungs, stomach, kidneys, pancreas, bladder, breasts and cervix. According to an international research agency, cigarettes consist of more than 80 cancer-causing chemicals including Phenol, Acetone, Naphthalene, Ammonia, Butane, Arsenic and Carbon Monoxide (to name just a few). While most smokers think they will never get cancer or experience serious health problems due to smoking tobacco products, the opposite is rather true. The adverse long-term effects of smoking are undeniable! Research on tobacco shows that there is a link between smoking among young people and addiction to nicotine and other substances, reduced lung function, lung development and asthma. In any country, legislation is very clear about where smokers are allowed to smoke and how (if at all) tobacco products can be promoted and advertised. Were it not for legislation, millions of more people would have died each year from smoking- related diseases, and more non-smokers would have fallen ill from secondhand smoke. In most countries, tobacco products may not be sold to individuals under the age of 18 years – for good reason. Tobacco research also obviously plays a significant and very informative role in legislation, because if it was not for research, we would probably have been unaware of the dangers of tobacco smoking, and there would have been no harm reduction approaches, which means every country's health sector would have been under tremendous pressure. In addition to the many health benefits of quitting smoking, research on tobacco also indicates that it has certain social benefits, such as boosting one's personality. Researchers at a well-known international research agency in the UK, have found that smoking is a trigger for impulsivity and that neurosis often occurs in adults over the age of 35 years, who smoke. Neuroses involve feelings of negativity and anxiety and explain why smokers often grab a cigarette first, in stressful situations or moments. As a result, it is safe to say that smoking not only has various detrimental effects on health but can also promote underlying psychological problems, such as depression, especially in adolescents. It has been found that the less a person smokes, the less his or her neuroses and the data also indicated that adolescents who smoke, behave without much consultation. This type of research is important to determine social behaviour patterns in smokers, in order to find means or alternatives where complete smoking independence or independence from nicotine can be achieved. More information on reliable research on tobacco and findings can be found online when you visit the website of a leading research company that specialises in Behavioural Science in Tobacco Harm Reduction. Thanks to research on tobacco and legislation, smokers in offices have been relegated to special smoking rooms where they can no longer suffocate and irritate the non-smokers in the building with their smoke clouds, and buses, trains and public places have also become cleaner, safer environments for all to enjoy. About us: CSUR is a Global Leader on Behavioural Science in Tobacco Harm Reduction, operating from their base at the Centre for Substance Use Research Ltd in Glasgow. CSUR opened in 1994 linked initially to the University of Glasgow, and in 2011 CSUR became a wholly independent research centre focussing on a wider range of substance use issues and developing a large programme of behaviourally focussed regulatory science research assessing the contribution of ENDS in reducing tobacco-related health harm. Our team comprises post-doctoral researchers in behavioural science, experts in marketing, cyber security, and media. Our focus is on furthering the goals of tobacco-related harm reduction and assessing the public health impact of Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS) and our goal is to ensure that those working within these industries have access to high-quality behavioural research that can further their owns goals of reducing the harms associated with the use of combustible tobacco products. Find out more by visiting our website at https://www.csures.com.