Jun 28, 2010
Indoor Smoking Ban in Wisconsin
Jun 25, 2010
Why Does Woman Suffers from Fatal Lung Disease
Lynda Mitchell, 52, who is on her last legs from Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, has always loathed tobacco.
The mom of one believes that her parents are responsible for her sickness, who each lighted 60 cigarettes in a day.
Jun 22, 2010
New Anti-Tobacco Propaganda in Massachusetts
Jun 16, 2010
Why Menthol Cigarettes Should be Banned?
Jun 14, 2010
New Proposal to Prohibit the Display of Cigs in Guernsey
The Health and Social Services Department also wants stricter rules surrounding tobacco vending machines.
Deputies are being asked to agree to ban the display of tobacco at the point of sale and restrict vending machines to adult-only establishments.
The proposals will go before the States in June.
In 1996, the States became the first government in the British Isles to ban tobacco advertising.
The proposals also include making tobacco vending machines token operated and ensuring all products imported into the island include pictorial warnings.
Jun 9, 2010
The A-Team Should Quit Smoking
The actor plays John 'Hannibal' Smith in Joe Carnahan's big screen adaptation of the hit 1980s TV show. The film is about a group of US Army Special Forces soldiers who become mercenaries after they escape from jail, where they were sent after they were convicted of a crime they didn't commit.
Liam's character is famous for his love of cigars, which horrified the actor, who quit smoking Marlboro in the 1990s. He tried to use rubber cigars at first, but was chain-smoking again by the second day of filming.
"I stopped smoking 16 years ago, it was a real issue for me," Liam told Australia radio programme The Kyle and Jackie O Show. "Joe insisted I have cigars and because it was Canada, they don't have a trade embargo with Cuba and the props guys got me these amazing Cuban cigars.
"I got them to make rubber ones, because I didn't want to be puffing on a cigar, but Joe, who is a big cigar smoker said, 'No, it looks so false!' I said, "Joe, I'm an addict! I can't smoke this stuff!' Day 2 and I discovered cigars. It was dangerous!"
Liam has now managed to wean himself off tobacco for a second time, and has already decided he will never smoke for a film again. If there is a sequel to The A-Team, he is planning to suggest his character wears nicotine patches instead of smoking.
"If we do a sequel, I think I'll have to insist on no cigars," Liam said. "We'll all have patches on instead."
Jun 7, 2010
Higher Levels of Cancer-Causing Chemicals in U.S. Cigarettes
“We know that cigarettes from around the world vary in their ingredients and the way they are produced,” said Dr. Jim Pirkle, deputy director for science at CDC’s National Center for Environmental Health, Division of Laboratory Sciences. “All of these cigarettes contain harmful levels of carcinogens, but these findings show that amounts of tobacco-specific nitrosamines differ from country to country, and U.S. brands are the highest in the study.”
The types of tobacco in cigarettes vary by manufacturer and location of production. The U.S. cigarette brands studied contained “American blend” tobacco, a specific mixture of tobacco from the U.S. that contains higher TSNA levels. The Australian, Canadian, and U.K. cigarette brands were made from “bright” tobacco, which is lighter in color and flue cured. Changes in curing and blending practices could reduce U.S. smokers’ exposure to one type of cancer-causing compound, however, this would not necessarily result in a safer product.
OLFA North America
Study collaborators enlisted 126 persons from Australia, Canada, the U.K., and the U.S. who smoke cigarettes daily to participate in the study. Cigarettes smoked by study participants represented popular brands in each country.
Scientists measured chemicals in cigarette butts collected by each smoker over a 24-hour period to determine how much of a certain TSNA entered the smokers’ mouths during that period. They also collected urine samples from study participants to find out how much breakdown product from this TSNA appeared in the urine. Comparing the results from these two types of sampling showed a correlation between the amount of one TSNA that enters the mouth and the amount of its breakdown product that appears in the urine. This is the first time this relationship has been documented.
Jun 2, 2010
Smoke-Free Parks Issue Revisited
“I’m bringing the resolution back, and we’re going to vote on it,” Ross asserted.
The county was hit up earlier this year, by the Erie-Niagara Tobacco Free Coalition, to erect no-smoking signs in areas of county parks where children are most likely to congregate: pools, beaches, playgrounds, athletic fields and restrooms.
Legislators have vigorously debated the wisdom of OK’ing signs that chastise a legal activity. Phrases such as “Our park is smoke-free, please don’t smoke or litter” and “Young lungs at play: This is a tobacco-free zone,” come perilously close to sounding like law when there isn’t one to enforce, opponents say. A proposed policy declaring child-centered areas of county parks to be tobacco-free was tabled last month.
Daniel Stapleton, county public health director, appealed to legislators Tuesday to read the signs as encouragement, nothing more. He’s not asking for a law against smoking in county parks and doesn’t believe the phrasing of signs shown to legislators so far conveys anything more than a suggestion.
“This isn’t a matter of trying to take people’s rights away. The signs are just some gentle reminders: Hey, kids are here, don’t smoke here,” Stapleton said. “There won’t be signs in the parking lot, or the pavilions, just where children play.”
When asked, adult smokers typically will refrain from lighting up around children, Stapleton said. The point of the signs is to encourage consideration for children, who are more adversely affected by secondhand smoke — and also are less likely to take up the habit if they don’t see adults doing it, he added.
Legislator Phillip “Russ” Rizzo, I-North Tonawanda, likened the signs to police cars: Their mere appearance discourages criminal activity, and the police didn’t have to do anything except drive them.
“I think these signs will deter people from smoking ... in the presence of other people,” he said.
Legislator Renae Kimble, D-Niagara Falls, still isn’t sold on them. Phrases declaring parks or areas of parks are “tobacco-free” and “smoke-free” still sound too much like law to her.
“We may not like the fact that people smoke, but they have a legal right to do so. ... This language needs to be changed; it needs to be toned down,” she said.
The Erie County Legislature recently adopted a sign policy for county parks seeking visitors’ voluntary compliance with no-smoking requests in recreation areas.