Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Study: Flavored small cigars are popular with kids

1 in 12 high school senior smoke flavored little cigars, says first national study of its kind

 http://finance.yahoo.com/news/study-flavored-small-cigars-popular-111352930.html


ATLANTA (AP) -- Small cigars flavored to taste like candy or fruit are popular among teens, according to the first government study to gauge their use.
About 1 in 30 middle and high school kids said they smoke the compact, sweet-flavored cigars. The percentages rise as kids get older, to nearly 1 in 12 high school seniors, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported.
The results — based on a 2011 survey of nearly 19,000 students, grades 6 through 12 — were published online Tuesday by the Journal of Adolescent Health.
Since 2009, the government has banned cigarettes with candy, fruit and clove flavoring, though it continued to allow menthol flavoring. There is no restriction on sales of cigars with such flavorings except in Maine, Maryland, New York City and Providence, R.I.
The sale of cigarettes and cigars to those under 18 is illegal, but according to an earlier CDC report, about 16 percent of high school students were smokers in 2011.
Health officials say sweet flavoring can mask the harsh taste of tobacco and make smoking more palatable.
"The so-called small cigars look like cigarettes, addict as much as cigarettes and they kill like cigarettes," said CDC Director Dr. Tom Frieden.
Tobacco companies have said they oppose smoking by those under age 18. But the marketing of flavored cigars suggests companies are trying to interest kids in smoking, Frieden and others said.
"The tobacco industry has a long history of using flavored products to attract kids," said Danny McGoldrick, of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy and research organization.
Sales of flavored cigars have boomed in the last 12 years, from 6 billion to more than 13 billion annually, according to calculations by his group.
The CDC survey also asked about menthol-flavored cigarettes. When those were included, more than 40 percent of kids who were current smokers in the survey said they were using flavored cigars or cigarettes.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

5 Suprising Reasons to Keep Trying to Stop Smoking

There are lots of reasons to stop smoking.  Here are five great ones!

1.  Your cigarettes are radioactive! they have Polonium 210 - the same poison that killed a Russian spy.
2.  If smokers were cars, they wouldn't pass a smog test.  Just ask Christopher Delo, a smoker and mechanic who too a drag and then blew into his auto shop's smog tester.  The machine showed his breath as a "gross polluter".  He's quitting smoking now!
3. Smoker's pets get cancer, too.  Dogs living with smokers had  6 times bigger risk of lung cancer.  Cats are 3 times more likely to get cancer when they live with a smoker.  Pets also get asthma and allergies from cigarette smoke.
4.  Got tar? If you're a pack-a-day smoker, you'll collect about a quart of tar each year...inside your lungs.
5.  Now with more nicotine! Since 1998, cigarette makers have been caught "spiking" cigarettes with more addictive nicotine.

Bonus! plenty of health problems go away or get better when you quit: 
Snoring
Heartburn
Vision Problems
Arthritis and Joint Pain
Risk of Heart Attach and Stroke     

Material used from American Lung Association