1 / 23

Smoking

Smoking. WHY, oh why, do people smoke?. Advertising. 400,000 people die (Americans) from the effects of cigarette smoking: Most from heart disease or lung cancer but also from other respiratory illnesses, stroke and cancers. Tobacco Use in American Society.

page
Download Presentation

Smoking

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Smoking

  2. WHY, oh why, do people smoke?

  3. Advertising

  4. 400,000 people die (Americans) from the effects of cigarette smoking: • Most from heart disease or lung cancer but also from other respiratory illnesses, stroke and cancers.

  5. Tobacco Use in American Society • Since 1994, the population of smokers has declined (22.5% of adults smoke daily) • Men (25.2%) smoke more than women (20%) • College students smoke less than year 2000 • Ethnicity, socioeconomics, education, gender, age are often factors that influence smoking

  6. Not all the news is good • Everyday, 6000 young people try tobacco and 3000 become regular smokers. • In addition the average age for starting to smoke is 13 and for spit tobacco is 10.

  7. Addiction • Nicotine is thought to be as or more addictive than heroin.

  8. Some Effects of Nicotine

  9. WHAT’S IN THAT SMOKE??? • 4000 different chemicals, at least 69 of which are known carcinogens • Particulate matter = TAR: small particles of phenol, cresol, pyrene, DDT, benzene which deposit in and on your lung tissue • Smoking one pack of cigarettes per day for a full year leaves one quart of tar in your lungs!!!

  10. Using tobacco exposes the body to over 4000 chemicals

  11. Nicotine - Addictive substance that makes users crave more tobacco Tar - Thick, dark liquid that covers the lungs and can cause lung cancer Carbon Monoxide - Poisonous gas produced when tobacco burns, same as exhaust fumes of cars

  12. How does smoking affect you???????????

  13. Some Effects of Smoking

  14. How Smoking Affects Lungs

  15. Effects of Tobacco on Body Mouth – bad breath, dulls taste buds Teeth – stains (ugly brown) Fingers - stains Lungs – bronchitis, cancer, emphysema Heart – works harder, increased risk of H.D. & stroke Stomach – one cause of ulcers Bladder – increased risk of bladder cancer

  16. How to die from smoking? • Coronary heart disease: leading cause of death in cigarette smokers. cigarette smoke speeds up the fatty deposits (plaques) in coronary arteries. • Other CVD- stroke, aortic aneurysm, pulmonary heart disease (right side of heart damaged) • Lung Cancer - benzopyrene (in cigarette smoke) cause genetic mutation in lung cells. • Other cancers: mouth, trachea, pharynx, esophagus, liver, colon and skin, bladder.

  17. How to die from smoking? • Chronic obstructive lung disease – lungs constantly irritated damaging lung function. (4th leading cause of death) • Emphysema- disease of the air sacs in the lungs lose their elasticity and are destroyed. • Chronic bronchitis- persistent inflammation of the bronchial tubes resulting in over production of mucus and chronic cough • Other respiratory damage- loss of cilia in nose, lungs and air passages

  18. Non-lethal affects of smoking • Ulcers • Impotence • Fertility • dental disease • Dullingof the senses-smell and taste • Higher rate of automobile crashesand other accidents • Skin-wrinkles, teeth staining, finger staining, • odorin hair and clothes • Economic

  19. The Risks of Involuntary (Passive) Smoking • Mainstream smoke = smoke inhaled/exhaled by smoker (15% exposure to non-smoker) • Sidestream = smoke from the burning product (85% exposure to non-smoker) • Second Hand = smoke exhaled by smoker Partners of smokers are 3 x’s higher for HD and 30% higher risk for lung cancer

  20. How to quit.

  21. Quitting

More Related