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The-health-risks-of-cigarette-smoking---part-ii
By Adam Waxler
Copyright 2006 Adam Waxler
Evidence of the health risks of cigarette smoking go back to the
1950s. However, the percentage of cigarette smokers was at its
peak in 1964, when the US surgeon general first issued an official
warning that smoking cigarettes was hazardous to one's health.
Following the surgeon general’s formal warning about cigarette
smoking, many reports were released on the link between cigarette
smoking and heart disease, lung disease, and cancer of the mouth.
However, the cigarette smoking habit continued, particularly with
young smokers who were most likely smoking as a sign of rebellion
and/or independence.
For adults, though, smoking cigarettes marked an addiction to
nicotine - the key ingredient that makes cigarette smoking both
pleasurable and addictive. This addiction to nicotine led to another
warning from the surgeon general in 1988, which put nicotine addiction
on the same level as addictions to cocaine and heroin.
The danger in cigarette smoking comes from the chemical substances
released either as a gas or as a particulate. Nitrogen oxides,
hydrogen cyanide and most especially carbon monoxide are gaseous
emissions from cigarette smoke that threaten to poison the body.
Nicotine is one of several hazardous particulates emitted from
smoking cigarettes. These particulates damage the cilia - the
little hairs lining the lungs that help transport mucus out of
the lungs. When the cilia malfunction, pollutants remain in the
lungs and the likelihood of influenza and bronchitis, emphysema
and other diseases increases.
Unfortunately, cigarette smoking has been cited as the cause of
over 400,000 deaths in the US every year.
However, government agencies, scientists and health officials
have also established that passive smoking, or second-hand smoke,
also has negative effects on the human body. The National Center
for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion has reported
that over 4,000 chemicals are generated by second-hand smoke,
with more than 50 of those believed to be cancer-causing agents.
In fact, in 1975, the Centers for Disease Control released a report
noting that toxic chemicals released from cigarettes stay in the
air and are inhaled by unsuspecting victims. Thus, the concern
over cigarette smoking shifted from a private-health issue to
a public-health issue.
For pregnant women, the negative effects of cigarette smoking
and second hand smoke raises even more issues. Cigarette smoking
and second-hand smoke increases the chances of low birth-weight
and even miscarriage. And, children less than a year old are twice
as likely to have lung infections if their mothers smoke cigarettes
compared to counterparts whose mothers do not smoke cigarettes.
Likewise, children who already have asthma, allergies or other
respiratory ailments can worsen their conditions if their parents
smoke cigarettes.
Over the years some cigarette smokers have gradually quit smoking
cigarettes, while non-smokers have become the focus
of more protection as the government
has worked on policies and legislation to curb cigarette smoking.
In the 1990s, class action suits started to bombard state and
federal courts, claiming that cigarette manufacturers employed
deceptive marketing tactics to keep consumers from knowing that
nicotine was addictive and worked on ways keep cigarette smokers
hooked on their product.
More recent suits against the cigarette and tobacco industry charge
manufacturers of also misleading consumers into thinking that
"lights" and similar cigarette products were healthier alternatives
to regular cigarettes. These more recent cases later led to the
multi-billion dollar settlement between the US government and
the cigarette and tobacco industry in the late 1990s.
These lawsuits and the consistency of health lobbyists and persuasive
government programs have helped pull down US cigarette smoking
rates on a consistent basis over the last four decades. With the
health risks of cigarette smoking so abundantly clear, it is likely
that these cigarette smoking rates in the US will continue to
decrease.
Article
Source: http://www.upublish.info
About the Author:
Adam
Waxler
Adam Waxler publishes a series of health related information products
including his new "Stop Smoking" resource filled with with FREE
articles and tips on how to Stop Smoking @
http://www.1-800-stop-smoking.com/quit-smoking
Keywords: Health
Effects of Smoking Cigarettes, chemicals
in cigarettes, cigarettes,
seconhand smoke,
effects
of smoking cigarettes, harmful
effects of smoking, cigarette,
cigarette smoking,
smoking cigarettes
**NOTE** - Adam
Waxler has claimed original rights on the article "The Health
Risks of Cigarette Smoking - Part II" ... if there is a dispute
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