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SMOKING FACTS

SMOKING FACTS. Abstinence Education:. Making an informed decision not to participate in an at-risk tobacco related behavior. The MONEY. Every single day, in the U.S., the tobacco industry spends nearly $29 million on advertising and promotions.$10.5 Billion a year.

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SMOKING FACTS

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  1. SMOKING FACTS

  2. Abstinence Education: Making an informed decision not to participate in an at-risk tobacco related behavior.

  3. The MONEY • Every single day, in the U.S., the tobacco industry spends nearly $29 million on advertising and promotions.$10.5 Billion a year. • $100 Billion in health care cost annually. • During 1997-2007, smoking-attributable health care costs and productivity losses exceeded $167 billion per year. • The tobacco industry increased its spending on advertisements and promotions by $2.7 billion between 2002 and 2003.

  4. The MONEY • A tobacco company once gave $125,000 worth of food to a charity, according to an estimate by The Wall Street Journal. Then, they spent well over $21 million telling people about it. I guess when you sell a deadly, addictive product, you need all the good PR you can get. • The tobacco industry spent $13.11 billion in 2005 on advertising and promotions.

  5. The SELL • One tobacco company proposed reaching its target consumer from ice cream trucks • In 2005, three quarters of new smokeless tobacco users were male, and more than half were under age 18 when they first tried it. • In 2006, a judge found that to keep smokers addicted, Big Tobacco manipulated nicotine levels. But too much nicotine can make you sick. • The U.S., China, Russian Federation, Japan, and Indonesia are the five countries that consume more than half of the world’s cigarettes.

  6. The SELL • Cigarette companies advertised " light " cigarettes as less harmful to the smoker, although they can deliver the same levels of tar and nicotine. • In 1995, a major tobacco company decided to boost cigarette sales by targeting homeless people. They called their plan " Project SCUM: Sub Culture Urban Marketing. " • In 1984, a tobacco company called younger adult smokers " replacement smokers. “ • 4,000 kids try tobacco for the first time each day.

  7. The SELL • In April 1970, Congress passed the Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act banning the advertising of cigarettes ontelevisionand radio starting on January 2, 1971. The Virginia Slims brand was the last commercial shown, with "a 60-second revue from flapper to Female Lib", shown at 11:59 p.m. on January 1 during a break on The Tonight Show. • Smokeless tobacco ads, on the other hand, remained on the air until a ban took effect on August 28, 1986.

  8. The SELL • Recently, even further restrictions took effect under the newly enacted Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act. Effective June 22, 2010, the new regulations prohibit tobacco companies from sponsoring sports, music, and other cultural events. Also, tobacco companies can no longer display their logos or advertise their products on T-shirts, hats, or other apparel.

  9. Look at old commercials with play button….. First commercial 1953 Old smoking commercials FROM BACK IN THE EARLY DAYS (1960-1969)

  10. The Georgia Smokefree Air Act, enacted July 1, 2005, prohibits smoking inside most public areas such as restaurants and worksites, and outlines specific guidelines for allowing smoking in and around establishments that serve the public. The law prohibits smoking in most public places, including: state buildings, restaurants/bars serving or employing persons under age 18, places of employment, auditoriums, class rooms and medical facilities. The Surgeon General’s report reinforces that all public places, even those exempted by the law, should consider the health of their employees and patrons and adopt a smokefree work policy. Statewide Smokefree Air Act helps Georgians breathe easier

  11. The PRODUCT • Nicotine is addictive. • Cigarette smoke contains more than 4,000 chemical compounds. • Nicotine reaches the brain within 10 seconds after smoke is inhaled. • One cigarette company genetically altered tobacco to have 50% more nicotine than regular tobacco. • Smokeless tobacco is addictive.

  12. The PRODUCT • There are 11 known human carcinogens in cigarette smoke • Benzene, arsenic and cyanide are all poisons. They’re all in cigarette smoke. • Hydrogen cyanide is in tobacco smoke. Hydrogen cyanide contributes to cardiovascular disease and chronic obstructive pulmonary (lung) disease (C.O.P.D.).

  13. The ADDICTION • Each year, only about 5% of smokers succeed in quitting long-term. That's just 5 people out of every 100. • On their websites, tobacco companies encourage people to quit smoking.  However, in 2006, a court found that tobacco companies manipulate nicotine levels to keep smokers addicted. • Female college students are more likely to smoke daily than male college students.

  14. The ADDICTION • About 70% of smokers say they want to quit. • 22.3% (1 in 5) of high school students smoke. • 8.1% of middle school students smoke. • Every day, about 1,500 youth become daily smokers. • It is estimated that as many as 22% of pregnant women and girls smoke. • 63% of high school smokers say they want to quit smoking.

  15. The DISEASE • Using smokeless tobacco is also associated with gingivitis, dental caries, abrasion, and staining. • Long-term smokeless tobacco users are nearly fifty times more likely to have cancers of the cheek and gum than non-users. • Smoking can lead to cataracts, the number one cause of vision loss in the world. • Pregnant women who smoke increase their risk of preterm delivery, low birth weight, and SIDS.

  16. The DISEASE/DEATH RATE • Of current smokers in the U.S., 719,000 have had a heart attack from smoking. • In the U.S., 30,000 to 60,000 people die each year from secondhand smoke-related heart disease. • Cigarette smokers are 20 times more likely to develop lung cancer than non-smokers. • In the U.S., over 400,000 people die a tobacco-related death every year. (3 Jumbo Jets 777’s fully loaded with passengers crashing and dying each day of the year)

  17. The DISEASE/DEATH RATE • Cigarette smoking alone is directly responsible for approximately 30% of all cancer deaths annually in the United States • Cigarette smoking causes 87% of lung cancer deaths. Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in both men and women • Smoking is also responsible for most cancers of the: larynx • oral cavity • esophagus • bladder In addition, it is highly associated with the development of, and deaths from, kidney, pancreatic, and cervical cancers

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