Last week I was driving
to the post office to ship some customer
orders. I noticed a foul odor blowing
out of my car's air vents
and I looked up at the car 5 car-lengths
in front of me. Sure
enough, I saw a hand reaching out
through the driver's window
flicking the ashes from a cigarette.
That was followed by a
plume of smoke, headed straight
for my car. I quickly reached
down and closed the outside air
vent.
Perhaps you believe that your smoking
habit is just YOUR
problem. Did you ever stop to analyze
why non-smokers are so
outspoken about smoking in public?
The secondhand smoke issue is
highly charged and still debated.
But there's more to the issue
of how your smoking affects other
people. This article is an
honest look--a chance for you to
evaluate the impact your
smoking has on everyone around you.
I encourage you to read the
articles referenced in the endnotes
for additional details.
SMOKING AND THE UNBORN CHILD
The evidence continues to mount.
Smoking during pregnancy does
affect your unborn child. Developmental
growth and birth weight
in babies of smoking mothers is
lower than babies of non-smoking
mothers. These same "smoking" babies
are more likely to be
shorter in height, slower at reading
and lower in "social
adjustment" than children of nonsmoking
mothers.
Statistics show that infant mortality--the
death of the baby
either at birth or through a miscarriage--is
50 percent higher
when the mother smokes. That means
nonsmoking parents experience
half as many infant mortalities.
The good news is that if you
stop smoking by the fourth month
of pregnancy, you can
significantly reduce these dangers.
(1)
"Women who smoke while pregnant pass
NNK, a very potent
carcinogen, to their babies still
developing in the womb.
Earlier research showed that offspring
of animals treated with
NNK developed tumors of the lung,
trachea, liver, and other
organs." (2)
A recent study even suggests that
individuals, whose mothers
smoked during pregnancy, were predisposed
to take up smoking
themselves. If you smoke while pregnant,
you may be encouraging
your child to smoke, years from
now! (3)
SMOKING AND CHILDREN
Newborn babies exposed to their mother's
smoking through breast
feeding and environmental tobacco
smoke show significantly
higher levels of urinary cotinine.
Cotinine is a major
metabolite of nicotine, and is used
as a marker for recent
cigarette smoke exposure.
A study examined 507 infants, finding
urinary cotinine levels
during the first 2 weeks of life
were significantly increased in
infants whose mothers smoked. Breast-fed
infants had higher
cotinine levels than non-breast-fed
infants, but this was
statistically significant only if
mothers smoked. Urinary
cotinine levels were 5 times higher
in breast-fed infants whose
mothers smoked than in those whose
mothers smoked but did not
breast-feed. Babies definitely receive
the harmful chemicals
found in cigarettes through both
breast feeding and
environmental exposure. (4)
Children of smokers are also 2 1/2
times more likely to die of
sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS),
or crib death. One study
found that nearly 60 percent of
all SIDS cases could be
prevented if smokers stopped smoking
around babies and pregnant
women. (5)
A meta-analysis of studies conducted
after 1965 showed
significant risk to children exposed
to secondhand smoke of
numerous ailments including asthma,
tonsillectomy, lower
respiratory tract infections, plus
many others. Children were
also at risk of death due to fires
caused by cigarettes. (6)
One study reveals an incredible statistic:
Children of smokers
are nearly three times as likely
to smoke as children of non-
smokers. Parents, have you ever
thought of yourself as a drug
pusher? (7)
SECONDHAND SMOKE
Does secondhand smoke cause cancer
or other illness? Do we have
to ask? This issue has divided the
pro- and anti-smoking lobbies
for many years. However, a study
by the National Cancer
Institute(NCI) released in November
1999, presents conclusive
evidence, including 18 epidemiological
studies linking
secondhand smoke to coronary heart
disease.
Donald Shopland, coordinator of NCI's
Smoking and Tobacco
Control Program, notes that the
report estimates that each year
in the United States between 35,000
and 62,000 coronary heart
disease deaths occur due to secondhand
smoke exposure, also
known as environmental tobacco smoke
(ETS). "ETS exposures are
related to much more than heart
disease. When the thousands of
ETS-related lung cancers and other
diseases are considered, ETS
clearly is a major cause of death
in the United States," said
Shopland. (8)
Read the full 430 page report here:
http://rex.nci.nih.gov/NCI_MONOGRAPHS/MONO10/MONO10.HTM
OTHER EFFECTS OF SMOKING
Besides the obvious effects of smoking
presented above, there
are many other effects that you
probably never considered.
First, smoking stinks. Never mind
the health risks. The
offensive odor intrudes on the noses
of people all around you,
from your family and co-workers,
to patrons at public places
such as restaurants and sporting
events. While you may feel it
is your right to smoke in public
places, consider how you would
feel if your next door neighbor
suddenly opened a chicken farm
in his back yard. The stench can
be sickening. The issue is not
so much a rights issues as much
as it is a consideration issue.
Treat the people around you with
respect, the way that you'd
expect them to treat you.
Aside from the smell of smoke, there's
also the issue of
cigarette butts carelessly discarded
along roadways and other
public places. While most smokers
would probably never consider
tossing a used cup or hamburger
wrapper out their car window,
many don't give a second thought
to flicking one cigarette butt
after another out the window. Don't
think one little butt
matters? Consider that it takes
one to five years for a
cigarette butt to disintegrate,
or biodegrade. (9)
What's that? You only throw out perhaps
one cigarette butt per
pack. Ok, let's examine that. You
litter one butt for every 20
you smoke. That's 5% of your cigarettes.
Not much, right?
Consider that the worldwide consumption
of cigarettes is
somewhere in the neighborhood of
6,050,000,000,000 per year. If
"only" 5% of cigarette butts were
discarded improperly, that
means 302,500,000,000 butts are
littering every street corner,
parking lot, public park, and beach
in the world. The next time
you stop in your car at a stop light,
look down next to your
car. You'll probably see dozens,
if not hundreds of butts.
What do improperly discarded butts
lead to, among other things?
Yes, fires! Thousands of fires are
started each year by
carelessly discarded cigarette butts.
Thousands of innocent
victims are killed each year as
a result of these fires. These
fires and deaths are easily prevented
if only you would take a
moment to properly discard your
butts.
How else does your smoking affect
other people? Consider that
your smoking habit costs hundreds
or thousands of dollars per
year. Add this amount up over 20
or 30 years, plus tack on the
interest that money could have earned
and you have wasted
perhaps $100,000 or more! Just think
what that money could have
done for you and your family. One
cigarette at a time, and no
one notices. But if you pulled $100,000
out of your bank
account, you'd be called a thief!
The financial costs don't stop at
the cigarettes alone. You're
also probably paying double or more
for your health insurance.
You're also much more likely to
incur doctor visits and medical
expenses than are non-smokers. This
costs you both for the
treatment as well as the lost wages
from your time off from
work. The value of your car and
home may also be reduced, due to
the odor and filth of cigarettes.
Have your personal relationships
been affected? Smoking can be
very offensive to non-smokers. Many
non-smokers won't consider a
smoker as a possible spouse. If
you're in sales, smoking may be
killing deals because you smell
bad, or have offensive breath.
People buy *you*, not just your
product!. Your career may even
be stunted due to excessive smoke
breaks. Smokers waste many
hours each week taking breaks to
satisfy their habit. Don't
think that your regular absences
go unnoticed by your colleagues
and your boss. While you're outside
relaxing, your co-workers
are inside working. If you were
the boss, to whom would you give
a raise or promotion?
Your smoking also cheats your family
and friends. When you die
early (the average smoker will die
eight years earlier than a
non-smoker), you rob your family
and friends of--you! If you are
unfortunate enough to get sick at
a very early age, you also
threaten your children's normal
childhood, and seriously impact
your spouse's life. Consider your
children, spouse, family and
friends when you smoke next.
Finally, don't forget that smoking
cheats YOU! All of the
foregoing information affects you.
When you smoke, you are
slowly robbing yourself.
The point of all this? Your smoking
habit has far reaching
consequences. Quitting smoking can
erase these negative
consequences and improve your life
and the lives of so many
other people around you. Start making
plans today to quit
smoking.
** Article © Copyright Fred
Kelley of QuitSmoking.com. Visit the web site at http://www.quitsmoking.com
for great information and products designed to help you
quit
smoking.
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