tobacco “quitting smoking is easy. i’ve done it hundreds of times!” mark twain
TRANSCRIPT
TOBACCO
“Quitting smoking is easy. I’ve done it hundreds of times!”
Mark Twain
I. Facts
A. Surgeon General: The U.S. government’s doctor for the entire nation – high position. WARNING: “The Surgeon General called
cigarette smoking the chief, single, most avoidable, cause of death in our society and the most important public health issue of our time!!”
B. Where does it come from?
Grown in southern colonies, South America, Central America.
Columbus introduces tobacco to Europe.
B. Where does tobacco come from?
1. What are the different ways to use it? Pipes Cigars Cigarettes Snuff chew
C. Smoke-related deaths
450,000 deaths each year from people smoking Does it affect you? How?
D. High School Statistics
Over 5000 teens start smoking each day 90% of all smokers started by the age of 19 Girls smokers are on the rise!!
E. Cost of Smoking (1 pack =$4.25)
If you smoke 2 packs a day = $ 1 week = $ 1 month = $ 1 year = $ 10 years = $
Will be much more because the price of cigarettes will go up every year!!!
F. Industry
1. Very profitable business2. In 2010 - $87 billion in sales3. In 2010 - $164 million was
spent on healthcare, lost wages, and research!
II. VOCABULARY
A. Nicotine: Stimulant drug found in tobacco, causes adrenaline to be released, heart rater to increase by 20 beats after only 2 cigarettes.
B. Carbon Monoxide: a poisonous gas that quickly combines with hemoglobin.
**This is a test question!!
C. Cilia: hair like structures projected from the mucous membrane of the air passages.
D. Tar: residue formed when gases and particles of tobacco smoke condenses.
E. Carcinogenic: Cancer causing agent
III. Cigarette Smoke
A. Contains 4000 chemicals, including 43 that are known to cause cancer!
B. Some additives in cigarettes, when heated to 880 degrees F become carcinogenic.
IV. Effects of Tobacco
A. Just one cigarette: 1. Decreases your skin temperature 2. Obstructs the flow of blood and air
into the lungs. 3. Increases heart rate: an extra 15-20
points. 4. Raises blood pressure: 10-20 points
5. Decreases control of hand
to eye coordination.
B. Social effects: Bad breath Clothes smell Smokers cough Expensive $$$$$$$$ Yellow teeth Hair & nails brittle Loss of taste wrinkles
C. Physiological 1. Carbon Monoxide: Blood cells
attach to it rather than oxygen. Oxygen levels go down and the heart has to work harder.
2. Smoker’s cough: Cilia damaged by chemicals, mucus can’t be moved through the lungs – makes you cough.
3. Nicotine Poisoning: Too many, too quickly – dizzy, fainting, clammy skin, vomiting, diarrhea.
4. Heart Disease: Overworks the heart 5. Blood Vessels: Chemicals cause
them to constrict, heart must work harder, blood doesn’t get to the fingers and toes.
5. Adrenaline: Hormone in body, nicotine causes it to be released; feel nervous, tense, heart speeds up.
Smoking causes fat to stick to artery walls
Healthy Lung
Bad Lungs
7. Lung Cancer: #1 cancer killer in the U.S.; smoking is responsible for 83% of lung
cancer.
8. Bronchitis: Inflammation of the walls of the bronchi
9. Emphysema: Disease where air passages are constricted and air flow is reduced.
V. Stages of Addiction
A. Pleasure smoker: social smoker – at parties, etc.
B. Negative effects smokers:
1. Smokes to relieve stress
2. Psychological dependence:
being dependent on something to the point of becoming
emotionally upset without it.
C. Habitual smoker: 1. Addiction: Dependent upon the
chemical 2. Physical dependence: person’s
body has become dependent on the chemical.
D. Heavy smoker: 1. chain smokes to keep enough
nicotine in the blood stream 2 Withdrawal: discomfort and sickness
that people suffer from when they stop taking a drug.
VI. Why do people start?
A. Peer pressure B. Feel grown up C. Parents smoke D. Advertising E. Diet
Anti-tobacco advertising
Is nicotine addictive?
Every cigarette costs 10 minutes of life.
-Health Edco
B. Health Risk
1. People exposed to environmental smoke have increase levels of nicotine and carbon monoxide in their blood
2. Burning, itching, tearing eyes, headaches, coughing, and
allergic reactions are all
results of passive smoke
3. The unborn child: low birth weight, spontaneous abortions, fetal death, and SIDS. Two packs can cut off 40% of a babies oxygen
4. Studies have proven that passive smokers do have an increased rate of lung cancer.
The Benefits of Quitting Within 20 minutes:
Blood pressure drops Pulse rate drops Body temp. of hands and feet
return to normal Within 8 hours:
Carbon monoxide levels in the blood return to normal
Oxygen level increases to normal
Within 24 hours: Risk of heart attack dec.
Within 48 hours: Ability to smell and taste
improves Within 72 hours:
Breathing gets easier Lung capacity increases
Within 3 weeks: Mucus in the lungs loosens Lung function and circulation
improve
Within two months: Blood flows more easily to
arms and legs Lung functions increases up to
30% Within three months:
Lungs become more healthy Don’t get as many colds
Within one year: Risk of sudden death from
heart attack is cut almost in half
Within five years: Lung cancer death rate for the
average smoker decreases nearly 50 percent
Within ten years: Risk of heart attack and stroke
become almost the same as that of non-smokers
Risk of cancer drops significantly
A. Smokeless tobacco:
• Contains tobacco leaves, a variety of sweeteners, flavorings, and scents
LIP CANCER
Cancer of the lip
“Hairy Tongue”
Cigarette Ads
Warning Labels(Cigarettes)
SURGEON GENERAL’S WARNING: Smoking Causes Lung Cancer, Heart Disease, Emphysema, and May Complicate Pregnancy.
SURGEON GENERAL’S WARNING: Quitting Smoking Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.
SURGEON GENERAL’S WARNING: Smoking by Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal Injury, Premature Birth, and Low Birth Weight.
SURGEON GENERAL’S WARNING: Cigarette Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide.
Warning Labels(smokeless)
WARNING: This product may cause mouth cancer.
WARNING: This product may cause gum disease and tooth loss.
WARNING: This product is not a safe alternative to cigarettes.
Speeds up
Cancer of Larynx &esophagus
Raises heart beatsConstricts bloodvessels - Heart attack
Cirrhosis
Adrenaline speeds upthe heart – increasesblood pressure
Vertebralcancer
Reduces sex driveIncreases impotenceCervix cancer & miscarriages
Nicotine stimulates adrenaline, Heart rate goes up.
Dulls taste buds
Chronic lung disease Emphysema Lung cancer
UlcersBurning
Reduces abilityto process fluids & waste
Constricts vesselsHeart attack
Cancer
Early onset ofosteoporosis
The R.J. Reynolds Family Tree
“My name is Patrick Reynolds.My grandfather, R. J. Reynolds, founded the tobacco
company that makes Camels, Winston's, and Salem's.
We’ve all heard the tobacco industry say smoking doesn’t cause health problems. We’ll, they ought to look at the R. J. Reynolds’ family tree!!
My grandfather chewed tobacco and died of cancer.My father smokes heavily and died of emphysema.My mother smoked and had emphysema and heart disease.My two aunts, also heavy smokers, died of emphysema.Currently, three of my older brothers who smoke have emphysema.I smoked for 10 years, and now I have something called, “small-airways lung disease.Do you really think the tobacco companies are being truthful?”
C. Chemicals 1. Cyanide – deadly poison 2. Formaldehyde – used to preserve
organs and tissues taken from humans and animals
3. Methanol – wood alcohol 4. Acetylene – fuel used in torches 5. Ammonia – found in household
cleaning products 6. Acetone – in paint remover 7. Nitrogen oxide and carbon monoxide –
poisonous gases 8. Nicotine – addictive drug, dewormer in
large animals.