0 vote(s).
Tobacco is a problem for many people, both men and women, adult and child, in this world. Once a person starts the habit, it can feel almost impossible to quit.
Tobacco smoking is dangerous for everyone. It’s bad for the smoker’s health, the people around him or her and the pets we’ve come to love so much. The more we research the affects of cigarette smoke, the more real the risk becomes for us.
Whether your concern is for yourself or a loved one, it’s important to understand some facts and information about tobacco
Tobacco is actually a plant. It has large green leaves. These leaves have been smoked in many different forms for over 2,000 years that we know of for sure. There is no safe form of tobacco, whether it be in cigarette form, cigar form, chewing or pipe tobacco.
The number of tobacco-related deaths picked up after the twentieth century. Before this time, tobacco products were not heavily used. In earlier days, cigarettes were rolled by hand. Someone who was experienced at rolling cigarettes could roll up to 4 a minute. This equates to 2,000 a day.
The first cigarette manufacturing machine was created in 1884. This machine was able to produce 120,000 cigarettes a day! It was after this machine was created that the number of cigarettes being sold rose quickly to one billion each year.
Today, approximately 840 packs of cigarettes are sold every second in the United States alone. Every 8 seconds, someone dies from a tobacco related disease in the world. Smoking is the number one preventable cause of premature death in the United States. On average, smokers die anywhere from 7 to 13 years sooner than nonsmokers, even if what they die from is not a smoking related disease.
In the United States, smoking kills more people than cocaine, heroin, alcohol, fire, car accidents, murders, suicides and AIDS combined. According to the Surgeon General, cigarette smoking causes heart disease, lung and esophageal cancer and chronic lung disease. Cigarette smoking also contributes to cancer of the bladder, pancreas and kidney.
What many people don’t realize is that consequences of using smokeless tobacco include cancer of the gum, mouth, pharynx, larynx and esophagus. Smoking nearly triples the risk of dying from heart disease among middle-aged men and women.
Approximately 10 million people have died from smoking-related diseases in the United States since 1964. 2 million of these deaths were from lung cancer. 48 million adults in the U.S. smoke. 33 % of America’s youth are smokers. According to a CDC survey, 1,136,900 smokers reside in New Jersey.
Tags: cigarettes, habit, nicotine withdrawal, quit smoking, smoking cessation, stop smoking, tobacco, tobacco use
Click here for Top Quit Smoking Products reviewed by our staff