Was special designed for those who are interest in knowing more about smoking habit and smokers' life style.
May 15, 2012
Anti-Smoking Legislation in Nigeria
At 27, Lanre Lawal seemed to have a bright future. He had distinguished himself as a fine student with a degree in civil engineering. For the young man from Osun state in southwestern Nigeria, a promising job with a good income was almost certain.
But Lanre’s joy was short lived. One day he slumped to the floor and was rushed to the hospital. That was in 2007. He died three months later from lung cancer. Peter Oguns, Lawal's childhood friend, said Lawal had been a regular smoker since their secondary school years.
Labels:
anti-smoking,
tobacco addiction,
Tobacco Control
May 8, 2012
Anti-Smoking Regulations Stricter
The Ministerial Committee on Legislation approved on Monday the Health Ministry’s proposal to severely restrict the advertising and marketing of tobacco products. If approved as law, the legislation will constitute a major boost to the effort to minimize smoking and a considerable change to the advertising sector in Israel. The proposals have been vigorously opposed by the tobacco lobby.
Under the new proposal, which is aimed at reducing the “attractiveness” of cancer-causing goods, tobacco products may not be advertised in newspapers and on the Internet, although advertising in tobacco shops may continue.
May 3, 2012
Cigarette Packs Hard to Open
Secretary of State for Health Andrew Lansley is said to have come up with the idea while attempting to open the plastic packaging on some batteries he’d just bought.
“I’d tried tearing it with my hands and biting the plastic, but it was just so frustrating,” said Lansley.
“I almost gave up, which gave me an idea – what if I was to make the packaging on cigarettes just as annoying?”
The new guidelines will force manufacturers to seal cigarette packages in the seemingly unbreakable plastic, and the cigarette boxes themselves will have no lid – instead smokers will have to steam them open with a kettle.
“Obviously the next step is to make cigarettes really hard to light,” said Lansley. “I’m also looking into making them taste of rotten fish and invisible.”
Apr 24, 2012
E Cigarettes, the UK’s Premium Smoking Brand
Yesterday Freedom celebrated St George’s Day and gave away over 200 free disposable e cigarettes to Londoners from their new range, which will be soon available on their new website and via many retail outlets nationwide. The disposable e cigarette is a great way for tobacco smokers to see whether the experience of inhaling vapour rather than tobacco smoke is a viable alternative to smoking.
Over the past year Freedom Cigarettes has convinced over 20,000 smokers to change their smoking habit and take up vaping e cigarettes. Electric cigarettes are a healthier and more social alternative to smoking tobacco, so for many people the decision to switch is easy. During this year Freedom will be running events, experiential stands and giving away loads of goodies as they make more smokers aware of the benefits of e cigarettes and the great flavors in their new range.
Apr 17, 2012
Teen Smokers and Tobacco Use
Why is important to educate teens on the topic of tobacco? Because according to the Tobacco Reality Unfiltered group (TRU), the number of teens who wish they would have never started smoking is 70 percent. Plus, once they have started it is very hard to quit.
What makes tobacco so addictive and so hard for teens to quit smoking? Nicotine. Nicotine, which is found in tobacco, is more addictive than heroin or cocaine. In fact, nicotine reaches the brain in 7 seconds.
Another reason teens smoke is peer pressure, stress, to look “cool” or because their parents smoke. Our goal is to show teens how not only addictive tobacco use can be, but also how very harmful it is to your body.
Apr 10, 2012
Tobacco Control Law in Indonesia
A tobacco control bill was first named to the House of Representatives’ list of priority legislation for deliberation and passage in 2009 — and there it smoldered until last October, when it was abruptly dropped from the list.
Rohani Budi Prihatin, a House staffer who helped draft the “bill to control the health impact of smoking products,” fears legislators are unwilling to revive it over concerns its passage could hurt industry players.
“The draft is ready, we finished it a long time ago,” he said. “But as you can see, no House members want to discuss this. All of them remain tight-lipped.”
Ignatius Mulyono, chairman of the House Legislative Body, said the legislation needed to undergo major revision.
“When will it be back on the list? When they review the substance and title of the bill, because it’s very biased toward the anti-tobacco lobby,” he said. “None of the parties supported the bill, so we had no option but to drop it.”
Apr 5, 2012
Smoking and World Economy
Smoking costs the world 1% to 2% of its gross domestic product each year and could kill about one billion people this century, authors of the fourth edition of the Tobacco Atlas said at the book's launch in Singapore.
The economic losses include direct and indirect costs such as healthcare spending for treating smoking-related illnesses and the value of lost productivity, say the authors of the book, which is published by the American Cancer Society and World Lung Foundation.
The cost of smoking could be even greater, as co-author Hana Ross said it was difficult to measure intangible costs like the suffering of family members or pain felt by patients.
"During the 20th century, tobacco killed 100 million people. The estimate is that in the 21st century, tobacco will kill one billion people," lead author Michael Eriksen said at the launch of the book at a global health conference in Singapore.
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