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Tobacco Use: Dangers and Prevention

Tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable death in the United States, resulting in nearly 440,000 deaths annually. This resource provides information on the harmful ingredients in tobacco, the dangers of smoking, advertising tactics used by tobacco companies, and the impact of tobacco use on various diseases. It also highlights the role of local health bureaus and the Surgeon General in preventing tobacco use.

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Tobacco Use: Dangers and Prevention

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  1. Internet Resources • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: www.cdc.gov • National Institutes of Health: www.nih.gov • Healthfinder: www.healthfinder.gov • MedlinePlus: www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus

  2. Tobacco Use “Tobacco use is the single most preventable cause of death in the United States. While tobacco companies continue to publish full-page advertisements refuting the dangers of smoking, nearly 440,000 Americans die each year of tobacco related diseases.” (CDC,2007).

  3. Tobacco • Tobacco is a plant that contains nicotine • Nicotine is a stimulant drug that is found in all tobacco products • Can be smoked in the form of cigarettes, cigars, and pipes • Three harmful ingredients/products: • Tar • Nicotine • Carbon Monoxide

  4. Ingredient Vs. By-Products • Ingredients: The elements or chemicals found in products • Ex: Nicotine • By-Products: Produced in the action of using a product • Carbon Dioxide

  5. Smoking • Tobacco smoke contains more than 4,000 different chemicals, with 43 being carcinogens. • About 48 million adults smoke and 3.1 million adolescents smoke. • Smoking harms nearly every organ of the body; causing many diseases and reducing the health of smokers in general. • About 400,000 or 1 in every 6 deaths are caused by smoking each year.

  6. Smoking • More deaths are caused each year by tobacco use than by all deaths from illegal drugs, alcohol, homicides, suicides, AIDS, car accidents, and fires combined. • Research has shown that smoking during pregnancy causes health problems for both mothers and babies, such as: Pregnancy complications, Premature birth, Low-birth-weight infants, Stillbirth, Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)

  7. Advertising P. 430 – 431 • How do tobacco companies influence young people? • Must all companies have the same warning on their packages? • What do tobacco ads fail to tell people? • How do tobacco companies get young people hooked? • Where are tobacco companies not allowed to advertise?

  8. Tobacco AdvertisingP. 430 • Tobacco companies can not advertise on TV, radio, and in teen magazines • Tobacco companies spend billions of dollars each year to influence people to use tobacco, with the majority of the ads aimed at teens • They do not tell you that more than 400,000 people die each your because of smoking

  9. Local Health Bureau • Responsible for enforcing the sale of tobacco • You must be 18 in PA to buy tobacco products • Surgeon General- Spokesperson and advocate for health issues and for prevention of diseases. Linked all of the following diseases to cigarette smoking: • Lung Cancer • Emphysema • Coronary Artery Disease

  10. Carbon Monoxide • An odorless, tasteless gas that interferes with the ability of blood to carry oxygen • Deadly gas formed during the burning of tobacco • It inhibits the body’s ability to carry oxygen to organs such as the heart and brain • When inhaled, it combines with the oxygen carrying hemoglobin, not allowing them to carry oxygen

  11. Carbon Monoxide • Exposure to the gas can damage and kill organs that were starved of oxygen • It takes much longer for your body to eliminate carbon monoxide than to absorb it, which is one reason why exposure can be so dangerous. • When carbon monoxide levels drop in the blood, oxygen levels raise to normal.

  12. Smoking • Filters trap very little of the tar and nicotine in tobacco smoke. • These factors increase the chances of getting a smoking related disease: • How long you smoke • How much you smoke • Occupation/Environment • In recent years, smoking among teens has decreased. • About half of all smokers started before the age of 18.

  13. Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD/COLD) • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a general term for a group of diseases that cause progressive damage to your lungs. It is a disease that interferes with breathing. • These diseases include chronic bronchitis, asthma and emphysema.

  14. Bronchitis • A recurring inflammation of the bronchial tubes- the two main tubes/airways that connect the wind pipe to the lungs • Causes mucus to line the bronchial tubes- less air is then able to flow from the lungs • Causes deep, harsh coughing and wheezing “smokers cough”

  15. Emphysema • Alveoli lose most of most of their ability to function properly. • Alveoli are small balloon like structures that attach to the bronchial passages. • They inflate and deflate with inhalation and exhalation.

  16. Emphysema Continued • The lungs lose their ability to inflate and hold air. • Air is trapped in the lungs due to a lack of supportive tissue, which in-turn decreases blood oxygenation. • The small balloon like structures burst instead of inflating and holding air. • People with emphysema breathe about 30x’s a minute

  17. Cardiovascular Disease • Smoking speeds up the development of cholesterol/fat deposits in the arteries and damages the inner lining of the arteries. • Fat deposits reduce the space in the artery through which blood can flow • This causes the risk of developing blood clots to increase. • A clot in the artery can cause a heart attack

  18. Smoking • Mainstream Smoke: The smoke that is directly inhaled into the smoker’s mouth and lungs. • Sidestream Smoke: Smoke that enters the air from a burning cigarette, cigar, or pipe. This has more tar, nicotine, carbon monoxide, and ammonia than mainstream smoke.

  19. Smoking • Environmental Smoke/ Secondhand Smoke: Exhaled mainstream smoke and sidestream smoke. This is also known as passive smoking and involuntary smoking.

  20. Methods to Quit Smoking • Nicotine Patch • Nicotine Chewing Gum • Nicotine nasal spray • Nicotine Inhaler • Non-nicotine pill • Cold Turkey- Most DIFFICULT and most SUCCESSFUL

  21. Quitting • If a smoker quits, the chance of premature death is greatly reduced • Nicotine Withdrawal- may cause people to become irritable, restless, anxious, or have cravings • Teens have a more difficult time quitting smoking than people who start when they are older.

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