how to reduce your chances of getting cancer by louise warren

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How to reduce your chances of getting cancer By Louise Warren

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Page 1: How to reduce your chances of getting cancer By Louise Warren

How to reduce your chances of getting cancerBy Louise Warren

Page 2: How to reduce your chances of getting cancer By Louise Warren

Introduction

•To me seeing people smoking is like having an addiction but there is no merit in having something in the short term that will only kill you in the long term. Today I will be talking on why we should not smoke and the effects on the smokers health, how it affects people around them and the governmental action given.

Page 3: How to reduce your chances of getting cancer By Louise Warren

Smoking is dampens your ability to smell

•Smoking lessens your ability to smell which will often dampen down the stench that is exuded in clothing, living rooms, cars ect

•It can also mask any yukky foods and drink .

Page 4: How to reduce your chances of getting cancer By Louise Warren

Smoking also changes the cellular structure of your body• Secondly smoking will change the cellular

growth that occurs naturally in the oesophagus from villi which are little cells like whiskers that allow you to cough up phlegm are not present in smokers who are continuing to smoke to a single cell flat surface. This is why phenomena is present in older smokers.

• Smoking has been proven to cause throat cancer and cancer of the eosphigus

• This can be reduced by quit smoking

Page 5: How to reduce your chances of getting cancer By Louise Warren

Smoking can also be harmful to people around you• Thirdly, the effects on others. Government action has been taken to curb the rate of

smokers in public places due to the danger of secondary effects to people around the smoker after a long enough time has been proven to cause cancer.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Passive smokingSituationPassive smokingExposureChildren & adults in smoker household; persons exposed as a consequence of smokingin the workplace and other environmentsCarcinogenTobacco smoke passively inhaledPrincipal route of exposureInhalationTarget organ (or tumour type)Lung. Some evidence regarding larynx and other sites CommentSome inferences in relation to target organs apart from lung (eg. larynx)• Source from

http://www.cancer.org.au/aboutcancer/Environmental_causes_of_cancer/Proven_risk.htm#241294

Page 6: How to reduce your chances of getting cancer By Louise Warren

New Government laws have reduced the exposure of smokers on others •http://www.quitnow.gov.au/•http://www.quit.org.nz/•http://smokefree.nhs.uk/•http://www.smokefree.gov/

Page 7: How to reduce your chances of getting cancer By Louise Warren

In conclusion

•Smoking increases the risk of cancer to the smoker but also people around you.

•Smoking over a long time can change the cellular structure of your body and mask important senses.

•Governments are lessen the effects on others by working with councils to create smoking zones or restricted times.