Stopping Smoking Is Not Without Challenge

Tuesday, February 23, 2010 by John Bancroft

When considering the occasion of past Great American SmokeOuts, my thoughts turn to the challenges of quitting smoking and my heart goes out to those who struggle with nicotine withdrawal and freedom from smoking. I know because I quit smoking a thousand times.

By now we all know there are personal health reasons to stop, and about the dangers of second hand smoke.

Sometimes it helps to look past the personal, to see ourselves and our actions in a larger context. Here are a few facts that go beyond the nasty pictures of scarred lungs, that may give even the most dedicated smoker pause to consider stop smoking alternatives and their choices otherwise. For example:

Not Smoking Alone: Think smoking is on the way out? The World Health Organization says there are 1 billion smokers in the world. The tobacco industry is thriving despite efforts to regulate it.

Suffering Farmers: In addition to the health hazards for smokers, there are substantial health risks for tobacco farm workers, from inhalation of pesticides and tobacco dust and from "Green Tobacco Sickness" caused by handling the plant's wet leaves.

Crime Spree: Cigarettes are the world’s most widely smuggled legal consumer product. In 2006, about 600 billion smuggled cigarettes were sold.

Emitting Pesticides: As much as ten percent of the pesticide applied to the tobacco crop can appear in the secondhand smoke and side stream smoke. The tobacco industry uses some 25 million pounds of pesticides a year. This means over 2 million pounds of pesticides in the air around us.

How Much Is That Professor in the Window? Tobacco companies fund university and lab researchers to study the effects of everything from stop smoking products to tobacco advertising to cancer drugs. Do you feel comfortable that results will be unaffected by the hand signing the check?

Hard on the Land: Pesticide and fertilizer runoff contaminate water resources, and the curing of tobacco leaf with wood fuel leads to massive deforestation. An often-cited, in-depth study shows that an estimated 200,000 hectares (about 772 square miles) of forest/woodland is lost to tobacco farming each year.

 

They Want Our Kids: Advertisers use Hollywood movies to target children and youth around the world to glamorize smoking, forget any quit smoking images you would like to see.

Women Are Being Used! Doctor Thomas Glynn of the American Cancer Society notes the targeting of women by tobacco companies in an interview with Voice of America: "As an example, in China, about 4… 5… 6 percent of women across China are using tobacco," he says. "But yet in places like Shanghai where tobacco companies are focusing, we are starting to see figures like 20 or 25 percent."

You Wanna Smoke or Eat?
Tobacco replaces potential food production on almost 4 million hectares of the world’s agricultural land, equal to all of the world’s orange groves or banana plantations.

Quitting smoking is tough, but by rejecting an industry that is harming people and planet in the name of profit, you will be contributing to a healthier you and to a healthier world.  Good luck to all the potential ex-smokers out there….you can do it! Whether you quit smoking or cut back on the amount of cigarettes you smoke …. the effort is worth the fight.

Dark Chocolate Best Kept Health Secrets

Monday, February 22, 2010 by John Bancroft

There is more to dark chocolate than meets the eye of the health concious smoker looking for ways improve health and lower the danger of smoking.

This luscious dark chocolate pie is guaranteed to add some sweet heat and tantric appeal to a romantic meal. I don't know if it a smoking alternative but if you want to beat the urge to smoke give this treat a try and you might find it is a best stop smoking aid.

Of its six ingredients, four of them are thought to be aphrodisiacal: Chocolate, almonds, ginger and chile. Powers of attraction aside, this recipe for Chocolate Tantric Pie is unusual and delicious, and is as easy as pie to prepare.

This is a sweet chocolate pie with the spicy bite of ginger and cayenne pepper and no nicotine withdrawl!!!

It’s guaranteed to satisfy your sweet tooth, internally warm your belly, and give you that unmistakable tantric glow. There is very little work to creating this dessert. For a gluten-free version, omit the pie shell for a no-bake flourless torte. You can also pour the pie mixture into a baking dish, just cool before cutting into squares and serve like fudge.

INGREDIENTS
1½ cups organic half-and-half or whipping cream
3 cups semisweet organic chocolate chips
1 cup chopped almonds
1 cup chopped candied ginger
½ teaspoon cayenne pepper (optional)
9-inch pie crust

1. Over medium heat, bring half-and half or whipping cream to a simmer in a 1-quart saucepan, stirring to prevent scorching on the bottom.

2. Whisk as you slowly pour the chocolate chips into the cream and continue to stir until the chocolate has melted. Stir in half the almonds and half the ginger. Stir in cayenne if using.

3. Pour mixture into a pre-baked 9-inch pie shell. Sprinkle and remaining almonds and ginger on top. Cool until firm, slice, and serve.

Serves 8

Nicotine May Be Beneficial in Treating Parkinson's Disease

Saturday, February 20, 2010 by John Bancroft
Parkinson's researchers have long been intrigued by epidemiological research showing a possible link between cigarette smoking and a lowered risk of PD: the disease is far less prevalent among smokers compared to never-smokers. Nicotine also has demonstrated beneficial effects on PD in pre-clinical studies. Yet key questions about the relationship among smoking, nicotine and Parkinson's — including whether smoking tobacco products in fact confers protection and, if so, whether this protection stems from the nicotine in those products — remain unanswered.

New clinical trials can provide data on the safety profile of transdermal nicotine in never-smokers, the study leaders caution that patients should not introduce nicotine into their treatment regimen without the explicit recommendation of their doctor. The benefits of transdermal nicotine for PD have not yet been conclusively proven, and its safety for use in people who have never smoked remains unestablished. Trial participants will be closely monitored for any adverse health effects that may occur as a result of nicotine treatment.

The commercialization of a therapy capable of retarding or stopping the progression of Parkinson's disease — rather than merely masking symptoms while the underlying disease continues to worsen — would be a transformative event in the lives of the estimated 5 million Parkinson's patients worldwide. Transdermal nicotine holds the additional advantages of wide availability and relatively low cost.

NRT Does Not Make A Smoker Quit

Saturday, February 20, 2010 by John Bancroft
Nicotine replacement therapy includes nicotine substitutes drug products, such as nicotine transdermal patches and nicotine gum. NRT may help a smoker quit, but does not 'make 'them quit.

Stopping smoking requires a change in behavior that does not necessarily require any nicitine replacement therapy.

Nicotine Replacement Therapy Not Necessary.

Saturday, February 20, 2010 by John Bancroft
Nicotine replacement therapy has become a common treatment for smokers who want to quit, but may be over promoted, according to an essay published by the Public Library Science. According to the essay, most smokers quit without assistance, so nicotine replacement may not be necessary.

The essay was written by Simon Chapman and Ross MacKenzie from the School of Public Heath in the University of Sydney, Australia. According to data they collected most smokers quit without assistance, or 'cold turkey.' According to the researchers, doctors should emphasize the positive message that unassisted smoking cessation is the most successful method for quitting smoking.

According to the researchers, the most successful smoking cessation method is quitting 'cold turkey.' Instead of recommending a drug based therapy to quit smoking, heath authorities should emphasize the positive message that unassisted smoking cessation is the most successful method of quitting. NRT is often recommended in spite of the evidence that most ex-smokers who have quit successfully have quit on their own. The most successful methods are to quit cold turkey or to cut down on the number of daily cigarettes and quit more gradually.

The researchers studied the data from 511 studies that were published in 2007 and 2008. They found that the studied showed repeatedly the two- thirds to three- quarters of ex-smokers stopped unaided. In addition, they from that most ex-smokers reported that quitting was not as difficult as they expected.

Smoking increases the risk of serious diseases, including lung disease, cancer and heart disease. Quitting smoking is an investment in your good health and the health of people that live with you, because everyone who breathes in the cigarette fumes is affected adversely. Whether you decide to quit unassisted, or through the use of nicotine replacement therapy ,the decision to quit can be an important step to a lifetime of freedom from cigarettes.

DiCaprio Reveals His Persnal Struggle To Quit Smoking

Saturday, February 20, 2010 by John Bancroft

 

Leonardo DiCaprio has revealed that he is struggling to stop smokiing.

The Shutter Island actor admitted that he has tried using nicotine replacement  patches, but they have caused him severe sleep problems as part of way to overcome the urge to smoke.

"When I use  nicotine replacement patches I have blood curdling nightmares of murder. Mass murders," Contactmusic quotes his as saying.

"I wake up in the middle of the night and have to take them off. I don't really remember my dreams that much apart from then. I don't know what that means about me from a psychological point of view but that's the truth."

DiCaprio recently revealed that he spends time with his friends as "therapy" to find freedom from smoking.

Shutter Island opens in the US on February 19 and in UK cinemas on March 12.

Second Hand Smoke

Saturday, February 20, 2010 by John Bancroft
No one, ever, has shown that tobacco smoke residue causes cancer. In fact no one has shown that side stream or exhaled tobacco smoke causes cancer. The issue for anti-tobacco crusaders is smell and preferences, and interfering with smokers, not some serious public health issue." Elizabeth Whelan, "In the end, these claims of third-hand smoke dangers will be confirmed for what they really are--nonsense." (Read articles here at the Newsletter going back to 2003 about this Junk Science.)

Is Chocolate Really Good for You?

Thursday, February 18, 2010 by John Bancroft

Yes, say researchers at McMaster University in Ontario, who released data showing that dark chocolate lowers your risk of stroke, and lessens the likelihood of death after a stroke, as well. It’s not the chocolate that’s so healthy; it’s a flavonoid called epicatechin, which is present in the original cocoa beans from which chocolate is made. (It’s easy to forget that chocolate comes originally from plants.) The plant-based chemical relaxes blood vessels and clears cholesterol, easing blood flow to and from the heart.

Flavonoids are present primarily in dark chocolate; the process used to create milk chocolate dilutes them. So the M&Ms and Hershey’s milk chocolate kisses don’t count.

But here’s the rub: To offset the bitterness of the cacao beans, chocolate contains a lot of sugar, and sugar’s not good for you. So yes, chocolate is good for you, but only dark chocolate. And it’s only good for you in small doses, so don’t overwhelm your body with a blood sugar spike. (See previous item about soda pop, insulin, and the health of your pancreas.)

So What’s the Answer? Moderation in All Things.
Limit yourself to the occasional soda — one a week or less. Drink water or fruit juice the rest of the time; the study found no link between juice and pancreatic cancer. Even better, drink milk — it builds bone and contains vitamin D, which is turning out to be the greatest cancer-preventative of all time.

Allow yourself a two-inch square (3-4 ounces) of dark chocolate a day; it makes a great late-afternoon pick-me-up. Then put away the rest of the bar and get out the fruit. This month has also seen the publication of studies demonstrating that blueberries prevent colon cancer, mangoes and pomegranates prevent breast cancer, and the combination of yogurt and blueberries together cures intestinal disorders.

None of this is news, of course; experts have been saying for years that blueberries and other colorful fruits are rich in the phytochemicals that prevent cancer. But the evidence just keeps mounting, with new antioxidants isolated and documented in lab studies each year. I’m sure next week will give us a new ingredient to add to our fruit salads.

 

Repost from:

Originally posted by Mel, selected from Caring.com Feb 17, 2010
 

but .... I'm still addicted to nicotine

Thursday, January 28, 2010 by John Bancroft

... but I'm still addicted to nicotine

Are you worried about the possible nicotine side effects from your addiction?

Surprisingly you may be addicted to a recognizable brand name nicotine replacement chewing gum.

That addiction may be harder to give up than when you were physically smoking cigarettes.

Are you desperate to give it up before the dangers of nicotine does any further damage to your health?

Nicotine Replacement Therapy (NRT) can be somewhat of a mixed blessing.

Perhaps someone you know who has quit smoking by chewing nicotine gum has encouraged or even badgered you to try NRT...maybe even your doctor.

How easy it seems, but if it is so easy why are so many ex smokers chewing nicotine gum ... some for over Ten (10) years since they stopped smoking cigarettes.

Nicotine is a highly addictive drug. It doesn't take people long to feel the biological effects. The brain receptors respond to substances such as nicotine and they very quickly want more.

It is one of the most addictive substances and we know that nicotine side effects are not only a danger of smoking. 

But how many smokers that quit smoking have actually swapped one nicotine addiction for another?

If you are looking for effective way to stop cravings, the urge to smoke and withdrawal symptoms from tobacco-delivered nicotine-dependence yu will be happy to know that there are some terrific nicotine free non addictive products available. Many of these products made from natural ingredients.

Some of these alternatives to NRT’s even contain dark chocolate which has been proven in clinical studies to increase cardiac function and arterial blood flow in smokers.

Take your time and look for what will work for you to take away your addiction.

 

Tribe to Buy Cigarette Factory

Thursday, January 28, 2010 by John Bancroft


An upstate New York tribe that has clashed with state government over tobacco sales has inked a deal to acquire a cigarette factory, the Associated Press reported.

The Oneida Indian Nation, which sells about $34 million of untaxed cigarettes through tribal stores each year, announced that it is buying Sovereign Tobacco's factory in Angola, N.Y. The factory produces Niagara and Bishop brand cigarettes, which sell for about half the price of name-brand cigarettes subject to state taxes.

The factory purchase comes after the state legislature passed a law requiring that tobacco manufacturers ensure that wholesalers who buy their products pay the state's $27.50-per-carton excise tax. Tribes say that they are immune from such taxes and laws.

Sovereign Tobacco sells about 1.4 million cartons of cigarettes annually, mostly through various Native American stores.

Freedom From Smoking Without Being Told How or When

Thursday, January 28, 2010 by John Bancroft

I know I have the Freedom of Choice anytime to start cutting down on amount of cigarettes I smoke and still gain from it. I can even have the choice to quit smoking when ever I Freedom From Smoking.

I also know that no one can force me to stop smoking right now if I’m not ready to make the decision to quit smoking today.

Any of  my future plans give me my own time line for freedom from smoking when I choose to stop smoking!

In the meantime I know I have a product like to get me through times when the urge to smoke is nagging.

With that in mind I can relax and enjoy my freedom without being told how or when. Now I just smile because my new plan is simple.

      I take the time prepare meals properly.

      I take an energetic walk.

      I leave some time to relax at the end of the day.

My product tastes great and is the only product available with the health benefits of dark chocolate to help me to overcome the urge to smoke when I choose

You can too.

 

 

Kick The Urge To Smoke

Thursday, January 14, 2010 by John Bancroft

Seems like you always want a smoke when you are where can’t have one. So it makes sense to tell yourself you better make sure you can do something in those times that will allow you to get past those ugly situations. You want your cravings for a cigarette taken care of.  

Smoking should be about whenever or wherever you want, but it’s not. It's become more like them being forced to committ to quit smoking today!t. You know you when and where you won’t be able to smoke in your friend’s homes, in public places, inside of buildings, or anywhere where the craving is hardest to control.

Smokerzchoice is the answer. Use it anywhere, anytime, in any social smoking situation, any time that you want to smoke but can’t. You may be wondering how this is possible. The answer is quite easy. All you have to do is make sure you have Smokerzchoice on hand. This great tasting natural alternative to nicotine and tobacco products puts you back in control and gives you the ability to overcome the urge to smoke whenever you choose.

Perhaps someone you care about smokes and they are not ready to quit. If this bothers you are and you can’t seem to get them to control their cravings then you will want to think about purchasing the Smokerzchoice for them as well. This will allow them to relax, reduce nervous tension and curb that craving for a cigarette whatever or wherever the urge strikes.

And since they aren’t smoking no one will know because the smells and stains that regular smoker experience will be gone. And best of all no stinky cigarette bad breath.

Smokerzchoice may also be a great way to get ready to quit smoking if that is your choice.

Once you try Smokerzchoice you will they see all the benefits. Share Smokerzchoice with others you care about and they see for themselves as well.

It won’t be so hard to get around the urge to smoke and continue smoking and who knows quitting may not be as hard as you think with Smokerzchoice.

So as you have read there are lot of benefits for choosing and trying Smokerzchoice. Whether you smoke, want to cut down or just plain qui. and buy it for yourself. Smokerzchoice provides you the smoker with a way to overcome those cravings while other smokers are suffering and aren’t able to take care of their craving.

You will make them all jealous as they have to sit back and watch you relax without nervous tension or stress

You won’t have to worry about going outside for a smoke when the weather is bad, the plane is delayed or the food and company is just too good.

With Smokerzchoice you will be in control all of the time.

Smokers Have a Choice

Wednesday, January 13, 2010 by John Bancroft

Do you know why you still smoke?

Good, Bad, or Indifferent the Social Smoking and Economic Costs associated with smoking effect everyone’s smoking or quitting decisions.

One of life’s little indulgences, it could be, think about it? Nicotine could be just that! We know that in moderation tobacco provides relaxation and improves cognitive function.

Smoking is and should remain a matter of choice and that choice is not necessarily Freedom From Smoking for one group as long as adverse consequence of doesn’t impose health risk on others.

Whatever the reasons it is more and more apparent that admissions by smokers about why they smoke is changing. And it has little or nothing to do with the consequence of smoking. Truth be told this is the likely a backlash against all the stop smoking no smoking quit smoking regulations. Today many smokers today simply smoke for psychological and emotional reasons. There motivation to quit smoking may not be what it once was. This Truth may even eclipse the scientific support for nicotine addiction being the sole reason that people smoke and don’t want to quit. Physical addiction is one thing,  but many smokers don’t want to quit and presumably they understand why, when and where they smoke, and are very willing to challenge some of the old school smoking cessation thinking that goes along with quitting or continuing to smoke.

Workplace, travel and other no-smoking restrictions have turned smokers not ready to quit into pseudo criminals as they “sneak one in’. This “criminal activity” has become a smoker's challenge in light of, or in spite of the controversy over stopping smoking.

Second hand smoke may have been the mantra of those attempting to prohibit and form of smoking. However, with restrictions in place it is no longer valid.

The natural fact is that many smokers started smoking cigarettes in high school when it was “cool”. Nowadays, (even though it is politically incorrect to admit to it) many smokers enjoy a cigarette.

Oh my God shame on them! Isn’t it crazy that smokers have become condemned to the worst of the worst environments to takes that five-minute their smoke breaks?

Baby its cold outside! And really, does spewing carbon monoxide into the environment as you drive to work instead of using public transit so you can smoke in the privacy of your car really provide any kind of green or ecological sound advantage?

The rules have changed ... it's not just about help to stop smoking.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010 by John Bancroft

It's tough to be a hard-core chain-smoker these days. And it's not necessarily the dangers of smoking or secondhand smoke that are leading that charge

Half of the U.S. population could care less about the consequences of smoking but are more interested in when and where they can light up because they live in areas where smoking is banned in workplaces, bars and restaurants.

More than 70% of Americans don't allow smoking in their homes, including about half of current smokers.

So forget your urge to smoke, that nicotine withdrawal, or quit smoking cravings the rules for finding your freedom from smoking have changed.

Consequences of Smoking

Monday, January 11, 2010 by John Bancroft
Clean-Living Amish Have Lower Cancer Rates, Study Finds
January 8, 2010

 


 

Amish residents of Ohio have lower effects resulting from the consequences of smoking. Their  rates of both tobacco-related cancer and other types of cancers than other state residents, according to researchers at Ohio State University.

HealthDay News reported Jan. 4 that researchers found that the cancer rate from the danger of smoking among the Amish was 37-percent lower for tobacco-related disease and 72-percent less for other types of cancer.

The findings came as something of a surprise because researchers believed that intermarriage among the Amish could make them more susceptible to genetic mutations that lead to cancer.

"The Amish are at an increased risk for a number of genetic disorders but they probably have protection against many types of cancer both through their lifestyle – there is very little tobacco or alcohol use and limited sexual partners – and through genes that may reduce their susceptibility to cancer," said researcher Judith Westman.

Researchers tracked the incidence of 24 types of cancer among nearly 10,000 Amish residents of Ohio between 1996 and 2003. Even skin cancer rates were found to be lower among the Amish because although many work outdoors, they also wear protective clothing and hats, the study found.

The study was published in the journal Cancer Causes and Control.

States Fail to Stop Smoking Tobacco Legislation Failure

Thursday, December 3, 2009 by John Bancroft

A Decade of Broken Promises: The 1998 State Tobacco Settlement Ten Years Later

This report, issued by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, American Heart Association, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, American Lung Association and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, reviews the 1998 State Tobacco Settlement and concludes that most states have failed to keep their promise to spend a significant portion of the settlement funds on programs as smoking alternatives to protect kids from tobacco and nicotine addiction and help smokers quit smoking.

 

Making Cigarettes Safer and Reducing the Danger of Smoking

Thursday, December 3, 2009 by John Bancroft
Company Designs Filter to Remove Some Cigarette Toxins

 

A Hong Kong biotech firm has designed a filter that removes some of the toxic chemicals from smoking cigarettes and from secondhand smoke but leaves the tobacco flavor intact, Forbes reports in its upcoming Nov. 16 issue thus reducing the danger of smoking.

The company, Filigent, has developed the MicroBlue filter, which biochemically attracts and traps carcinogens in tobacco smoke reducing consequences of smoking. Research has shown that Filigent's Generation 3 filter removes 40-75 percent of the chemicals known to cause DNA mutations, for example.

"For years the public health community has just assumed that the smoke from cigarettes is all bad," said Scott Ballin, director for the Alliance for Health, Economic & Agriculture Development, a group funded by tobacco-state interests. "Now advances in basic science have given us a much more nuanced understanding of what's in that stuff -- what's harmful and what's mainly benign."

Only a fraction of smokers who try to quit smoking actually succeed, so smoking alternative products like MicroBlue could improve smokers' health without them really noticing. "People normally hate reduced-harm cigarettes. But this is different: It does not affect the flavor or the nicotine experience at all," said Canadian tobacco distributor Edward Roundpoint, a Filigent customer.

"We are in the business of saving lives," said Filigent CEO Melissa Mowbray-d'Arbela.

Worldwide, the cigarette filter business is worth $9 billion. The Fact brand of so-called 'harm reduction reduced risk' cigarette used a Filigent filter when it went on the market in 2005, but state attorneys general got the product pulled from the marketplace on charges of making unsubstantiated health claims.

UK Study Calls Tobacco 9th Most Dangerous Drug

Thursday, December 3, 2009 by John Bancroft
Drug Users Rank Alcohol, Tobacco Among Most Dangerous Drugs

 

Researchers who surveyed drug users in the U.K. found a high level of awareness about the harms associated with use of various substances, Medical News Today reported Nov. 26.

Asked to rank 20 drugs based on their harms, 1,500 drug users placed heroin, crack and cocaine as the top three most dangerous drugs; alcohol was ranked fifth, and tobacco ninth. Marijuana was ranked 18th.

The survey was conducted by University College London (UCL) and Imperial College London researchers. The ranking scale used in the study was based on a framework proposed by David Nutt, until recently the British government's top advisor on drug issues.

"Given that the (U.K.'s) Misuse of Drugs Act aims to signal to young people the harmfulness of drugs, this suggests a flaw with the current classification of drugs. We found that drug users rated legal substances such as alcohol and tobacco as more harmful than Class A substances like LSD and ecstasy," said UCL researcher Celia Morgan, who added that the study found "a high correlation between harm ratings by users and those made previously by scientific experts across all substances, suggesting users are well informed about the harms of drugs."

Researchers also queried drug users on the perceived benefits of the drugs they took; LSD, marijuana and ecstasy were ranked highest in terms of their short- and long-term benefits by users. "We recommend that future health campaigns consider whether to include the benefits of some drugs," said Morgan. "By only citing harms, such campaigns likely represent -- from a user's perspective -- an unbalanced view and may mean that the overall message is more likely to be ignored."

The 20 substances in the study were alcohol, alkyl nitrates, amphetamines, anabolic steroids, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, buprenorphine, marijuana, cocaine, crack, ecstasy, GHB, heroin, LSD, ketamine, khat, 4-MTA, methylphenidate, solvents, street methadone, and tobacco.

The research was published in the November 2009 issue of the Journal of Psychopharmacology.

Best Stop Smoking Aid? Ban Smoking...

Saturday, November 28, 2009 by John Bancroft

Related Companies, a national developer that owns 17 buildings in New York City, is banning smoking in some of its properties, saying the aim is to protect tenants from exposure to secondhand smoke, the New York Times reported Nov. 16.

Smokers (whether they want to quit smoking or not) who currently live in Related Companies buildings will not be evicted; however, new tenants in the developer's six buildings near Battery Park City and Chelsea must agree to stop smoking in thier apartments said company president Jeff Brodsky.

Another local developer, Kenbar Management, also plans to make renters stop smoking in all of the units and terraces in its new building opening in East Harlem in December. Smoking will also be banned on the sidewalks surrounding the building.

The move to ban smoking in residential buildings is gaining momentum across the country. The Department of Housing and Urban Development has recommended that public-housing agencies do so, and 50 public housing agencies have already banned smoking, said Betsy Feigin Befus, an attorney with the landlord trade group National Multi Housing Council.

Thomas A. Farley, M.D., New York City's health commissioner, has said the city does not plan to encourage public-housing developments to ban smoking, however.

Critics who oppose the smoking ban include Bryan Marx, 53, who has lived in a Related Companies building since 1999.  "I think it's absolutely absurd," he said.  "How about a little tolerance?"

Dale Smith, 41, who has lived in a Related Companies building for almost three years, said, "A policy that is in place because something has proven to be hazardous in eating establishments should be effective in the home."

A Truly Killer Crop

Tuesday, November 24, 2009 by John Bancroft

On the occasion of this past 2009 Great American SmokeOut, my thoughts turn to the challenges of quitting and my heart goes out to those who struggle to kick the habit. I know because I quit smoking a thousand times.

By now we all know there are personal health reasons to stop, and about the dangers of second hand smoke.

Sometimes it helps to look past the personal, to see ourselves and our actions in a larger context. Here are a few facts that go beyond the nasty pictures of scarred lungs, that may give even the most dedicated smoker pause:

Not Smoking Alone: Think smoking is on the way out? The World Health Organization says there are 1 billion smokers in the world. The tobacco industry is thriving despite efforts to regulate it.

Suffering Farmers: In addition to the health hazards for smokers, there are substantial health risks for tobacco farm workers, from inhalation of pesticides and tobacco dust and from "Green Tobacco Sickness" caused by handling the plant's wet leaves.

Crime Spree: Cigarettes are the world’s most widely smuggled legal consumer product. In 2006, about 600 billion smuggled cigarettes were sold.

Emitting Pesticides: As much as ten percent of the pesticide applied to the tobacco crop can appear in the secondhand smoke and side stream smoke. The tobacco industry uses some 25 million pounds of pesticides a year. This means over 2 million pounds of pesticides in the air around us.

How Much Is That Professor in the Window? Tobacco companies fund university and lab researchers to study the effects of everything from stop smoking products to tobacco advertising to cancer drugs. Do you feel comfortable that results will be unaffected by the hand signing the check?

Hard on the Land: Pesticide and fertilizer runoff contaminate water resources, and the curing of tobacco leaf with wood fuel leads to massive deforestation. An often-cited, in-depth study shows that an estimated 200,000 hectares (about 772 square miles) of forest/woodland is lost to tobacco farming each year.


 

They Want Our Kids: Advertisers use Hollywood movies to target children and youth around the world to glamorize smoking, forget any quit smoking images you would like to see.

Women Are Being Used! Doctor Thomas Glynn of the American Cancer Society notes the targeting of women by tobacco companies in an interview with Voice of America: "As an example, in China, about 4… 5… 6 percent of women across China are using tobacco," he says. "But yet in places like Shanghai where tobacco companies are focusing, we are starting to see figures like 20 or 25 percent."

You Wanna Smoke or Eat?
Tobacco replaces potential food production on almost 4 million hectares of the world’s agricultural land, equal to all of the world’s orange groves or banana plantations.

Quitting smoking is tough, but by rejecting an industry that is harming people and planet in the name of profit, you will be contributing to a healthier you and to a healthier world.  Good luck to all the potential ex-smokers out there….you can do it! Whether you quit smoking or cut back on the amount of cigarettes you smoke …. the effort is worth the fight.