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TOBACCO (Курение)
The Truth About
Tobacco
Brand / Generic
Names
Cigarettes, Cigars, Chewing
Tobacco, Tobacco
Street
Names
Butts, Coffin Nails, Fags,
Snuff, Chew, Nicotine, Chaw, Stogies, Skag, Gasper, Cig, Smoke, Pill, Dog Turd
Get the Facts
Tobacco damages your
health.
Smoking is the most common cause
of lung cancer. Smoking is also a leading cause of cancer of the mouth, throat,
bladder, pancreas, and kidney. Smokeless tobacco can cause mouth cancer, tooth
loss, and other health problems.
Tobacco affects your body's
development.
Smoking is particularly harmful for teens because your body is still growing and
changing. The 200 known poisons in cigarette smoke affect your normal
development and can cause life-threatening diseases, such as chronic bronchitis,
heart disease, and stroke.
Tobacco is
addictive.
Cigarettes contain nicotine-a powerfully addictive substance. Three-quarters of
young people who use tobacco daily continue to do so because they find it hard
to quit.
Tobacco can kill you. Smoking is
the leading preventable cause of death in this country. More than 400,000
Americans die from tobacco-related causes each year, and most of them began
using tobacco before the age of 18.
Before You Risk
it…
Know the law. It is illegal for anyone under
18 to buy cigarettes, smokeless tobacco, or tobacco-related products.
Stay Informed. Addiction to tobacco is hard to
control. More than 90 percent of teens who use tobacco daily experience at least
one symptom of withdrawal when they try to quit.
Keep your edge. The poisons in cigarettes can
affect your appearance. Smoking can dry your skin out and cause wrinkles. Some
research even relates smoking to premature gray hair and hair loss.
Be aware. It can be hard to play sports
if you use tobacco. Smoking causes shortness of breath and dizziness, and
chewing tobacco causes dehydration.
Think of others. Smoking puts the health of your
friends and family at risk. Approximately 3,000 nonsmokers die of lung cancer
each year from breathing other peoples' smoke.
Get the facts. Each day more than 3,000 people
under age 18 become regular smokers. That's more than 1 million teens per year.
Roughly one-third of them will eventually die from a tobacco-related disease.
Look around you. Even though a lot of teens use
tobacco, most don't. According to a 1998 study, less than 20 percent of teens
are regular smokers. In fact, 64 percent of 12- to 17-year-olds have never even
tried a cigarette.
Know the Signs…
How can you tell if a friend is
using tobacco? Sometimes it's tough to tell. But there are signs you can look
for. If your friend has one or more of the following signs, he or she may be
regularly using tobacco:
· Wheezing
· Coughing
· Bad breath
· Smelly hair and clothes
· Yellow-stained teeth and fingers
· Frequent colds
· Decreased senses of smell and taste
· Difficulty keeping up with sports and athletic
activities
· Bleeding gums (smokeless tobacco)
· Frequent mouth sores (smokeless tobacco)
Q&A….
Q. Doesn't smoking help you
relax?
A. No. Smoking can actually
increase feelings of stress and nervousness. Break the cycle: Use drug-free
strategies to calm your nerves like exercise and talking to your
friends.
Q. Isn't smokeless tobacco safer
to use than cigarettes?
A. No. There is no safe form of
tobacco. Smokeless tobacco can cause mouth, cheek, throat, and stomach cancer.
Smokeless tobacco users are 50 times more likely to get oral cancer than
non-users. Those smokeless tobacco users who don't develop some type of cancer
are still likely to have signs of use, like stained teeth, bad breath, and mouth
sores.
Q. Isn't smoking sexy?
A. Only if you think bad breath,
smelly hair, yellow fingers, and coughing are sexy. Advertisements often portray
smoking as glamorous and sophisticated, but think carefully about who created
these ads and why.
The Facts About
Tobacco
Do you know what’s in a
cigarette?
Think it’s just made of nicotine
and tobacco? Think again! A cigarette releases 4,000 chemicals when a person
smokes it. If you take a look in your garage, basement, or under your kitchen
sink, you will find some of the things put into cigarettes. If you smoke, these
are just some things you’re putting into your body:
· Tar. See those
yellow stains on a smoker’s teeth? The same chemical is used to pave streets!
· Cyanide. This is
used to make rat poison.
· Formaldehyde. This preserves dead bodies. Yuck!
· Benzene. Helps
your car run, because it’s also used to make gasoline.
· Acetone. You can
use it to take off your nail polish, but you also inhale it when you smoke
cigarettes. Gross!
· Ammonia. You
clean your house with this chemical.
Besides these
ingredients, cigarettes also have nicotine, t he drug that makes it hard to quit
smoking
Tobacco
Questionnaire
Pick the correct
answer for each question.
1. Smoking is
harmful only if you smoke for a long time -- 20 to 30 years or more.
a)True
b)False
2. If you smoke a
pack a day for one year, it will cost you about:
a)$50
a)$1,500 c)$1000 d)$3,000
3. Nicotine in
tobacco is highly addictive.
a)True
b)False
4. Spit tobacco is
a safe and non-addictive alternative to cigarettes.
a)True
b)False
5. Which of the
following chemicals are found in cigarette smoke?
a)Ammonia (used to
clean toilets) b)Cyanide (used to kill rats) c)Formaldehyde (used to
preserve dead frogs) d)All of the above
6. More than 80%
of smokers start before they turn:
a)18 years old
b)21 years old c)25 years old
7. How many young
people become new smokers each day?
a)1,000
b)2,000 c)3,000
8. Tobacco kills
more people each year than which of the following causes of death?
a)Illegal drugs
b)Car crashes c)AIDS d)All of the above
9. Within two days
of quitting smoking, your sense of taste and smell are greatly improved.
a)True
b)False
10. What is the
number one source of pollution on California beaches?
a)Oil slicks
b)Hospital waste c)Cigarette butts
Quiz
Answers
1. False. The physical damage from smoking
sets in almost immediately -- even within a year after you start. Teen smokers
cough and wheeze more. They produce more phlegm (yuck!). They have lungs that
are damaged and actually smaller. They have weaker hearts. They perform worse in
physical fitness tests and competitive sports. And they get sick and miss school
more often.
2. $1000. It will cost you about $1000 in
one year if you smoke a pack of cigarettes each day. Think of what you could do
with all that dough: Play 2,000 video-arcade games; or talk on the phone to your
friend in another state for more than 100 hours! It's boring, we know, but if
you put $1000 every year in a bank account earning 5 percent interest, you'd
have $34,719.25 after 20 years. That's some serious cash!
3. True. Nicotine in cigarettes has been
shown to be highly addictive. About two-thirds of young smokers say they want to
quit smoking, and seven in 10 say they regret having started. Three out of four
teens who are daily smokers say they keep smoking because it's really hard to
quit. When they do try to quit, they suffer the same withdrawal symptoms ("the
crazies") as adults who try to quit. And nicotine addiction can fool you: Only 5
percent of teen smokers think they will definitely be smoking in 5 years, but
close to 75 percent end up still smoking 7-9 years later.
4. False. Spit tobacco (snuff and chewing
tobacco) is not a safe and non-addictive alterative to cigarettes. Using spit
tobacco can cause cracked lips, bleeding gums, and sores of the mouth that never
heal. It can stain your teeth a yellowish-brown color and give you bad breath.
Worst of all, use of spit tobacco can cause mouth cancer and other kinds of
cancer. It also may play a role in heart disease and stroke. Like cigarettes,
smokeless tobacco contains nicotine, and nicotine is addictive. One "dip" of
smokeless tobacco can deliver as much nicotine as several cigarettes.
5. All of the
above.
Scientists estimate that there are more than 4,000 known chemical compounds in
cigarette smoke. More than 40 of these are known to cause cancer in people or
animals. Spit tobacco, even though it is not smoked, contains high
concentrations of cancer-causing chemicals called nitrosamines, plus at least a
half dozen other chemicals that cause cancer.
6. 18 years old. More than 80% of adult smokers
started before they turned 18, and by that time more than half of them were
already smoking daily. Among high school seniors who use spit tobacco, about
three in four had tried it by grade 9. Hardly anyone starts using tobacco as an
adult. So if you make it through your teens tobacco-free, chances are great
you'll be tobacco-free for life.
7. 3,000. Each day 6,000 young people
will take their first puff on a cigarette and 3,000 will become regular smokers.
That's more than a million new smokers each year. One out of three of them will
die from a disease caused by their smoking. Unless we do something to stop this
trend, 5 million young people who are alive today will die from using tobacco.
8. All of the
above. Each
year smoking kills more people than AIDS, alcohol, drug abuse, car crashes,
murders, suicides, and fires -- combined! More than 400,000 people die from
smoking each year -- one out of every five deaths in the U.S. That's the same as
three fully loaded jumbo jets crashing each day with no survivors!
9. True. Within two days of quitting
smoking, your sense of taste and smell can be greatly improved. There are other
immediate benefits of quitting. The levels of carbon monoxide and nicotine in
your body go down quickly. Your heart and lungs will begin to repair the damage
done by smoking. You'll begin to breathe easier. Your smoker's cough will begin
to disappear. And you'll soon notice a boost in your energy and stamina.
10. Cigarette butts.
Littering
beaches and the countryside is only one way that cigarettes harm the
environment. Nearly 12.5 million acres of forest -- more than 10 Grand Canyons
-- are destroyed each year to provide trees to cure tobacco. That's about a tree
every two weeks for the average smoker. Secondhand smoke is another
environmental menace. It fills the air with many of the same poisons found in
the air around toxic waste dumps. And it's deadly: Secondhand smoke kills about
3,000 nonsmokers each year from lung cancer.