Transcript new tobacco

Tobacco
Key Terms

List and define in your notes the following
words:







Addiction
Nicotine
Stimulant
Tar
Carcinogens
Carbon monoxide
Smokeless tobacco
*Leukoplakia
* passive smoke
* mainstream smoke
*side stream smoke
*Nicotine withdrawal
* Nicotine substitutes
Tobacco Activity
Answer the following the questions:
 1. What was the purpose of this activity?
 2. How do you think this activity related
to smoking cigarettes?
 3. What were some physical effects you
felt after walking around the parking lot?

Top Reason Teens start smoking..


One or both parents smoke.
People they admire smoke.
 Teens find acceptance by peers if they smoke too.
 Mass media campaign for smoking works on
teenagers and adults.
 Teens feel invincible or that they can stop at anytime.
So why not try it?
 Teens believe they can quit anytime
 Smoking’s biggest draw is that it is an adult activity
that is forbidden.
 For relaxation or stress
 For it’s short term stimulant effect
Facts Continued…

Some of the contributing factors of teenage
smoking are:
1. Low socioeconomic status
2. Use or approval of smoking by
siblings/peers
3. Smoking by parents
4. Availability and price of tobacco
5. Lack of parent support / involvement
6. Lower self-image or self-esteem
Facts to Know

A study that was done by the CDC also found
some interesting facts and estimates:
1. About 3,900 teens under 18 start smoking each
day.

2. Of the 3,900 teens that start smoking each day 1500 will become regular smokers.
3.
Those who smoke often have secondary behavioral
issues such as violence, drug/alcohol use, and highrisk sexual behavior.

Tobacco


The American Lung Association estimates that every minute four
thousand eight hundred teens will take their first drag off a cigarette.
Of those four thousand eight hundred, about two thousand will go on
to be chain smokers. The fact that teen smoking rates are steadily
increasing is disturbing. We are finding out that about 80% of adult
smokers started smoking as teenagers
Nicotine is considered the number one entrance drug into other
substance abuse problems. Research shows that teens between 13
and 17 years of age who smoke daily are more likely to use other drug
substances. The use of other drugs is part of the peer pressure that
our children have to face. The earlier that our youth begin using
tobacco, the more likely they will continue using into adulthood.
Media and Smoking
Tobacco

Tobacco contains nicotine which is the
addictive drug in cigarettes.
 People smoke to reduce craving for nicotine,
which is a poisonous stimulant. Stimulant is a
drug that increases the action of the central
nervous system, the heart, and other organs.
 Nicotine raises blood pressure and increases
heart rate.
What is in a Cigarette?





Tar is what gives cigarettes there flavor.
Tar is a thick, sticky, dark fluid produced when tobacco
burns.
Tar paralyzes or destroys cilia, the waving hair like
projections that work to keep the respiratory tract
clear.
Several substances in tar are known to cause cancer.
Carbon monoxide is found in cigarettes, and is the
same gas in automobile exhaust fumes. It unites with
red blood cells, preventing them from carrying the
oxygen needed for energy to the body’s cells.
There are over 4,000 chemicals in tobacco smoke and at
least 69 of those chemicals are known to cause cancer.

A healthy lung compared to a
smokers lung!
Smokeless Tobacco

Q. What Is Smokeless
Tobacco?
 A. Chewing tobacco and snuff
are the two main types of
smokeless tobacco. Chewing
tobacco usually comes in leaves
or plugs that users put in their
cheek pouches and then chew.
Snuff is finely ground tobacco
that users put between their
gums and cheeks.
 Many people believe that
smokeless tobacco is not
dangerous, but that is not true.
Smokeless tobacco has many
bad side effects and serious
health risks, including cancer
and even death.
Smokeless Tobacco


Q Is Smokeless Tobacco Addictive?
A. Yes. Like cigarettes, chewing tobacco and snuff
contain nicotine - a highly addictive drug. Because the
nicotine is absorbed into the bloodstream from the
mouth, it takes longer to reach the brain. Smokeless
tobacco users do not feel the effects of the nicotine as
fast as cigarette users do. But about the same amount
of nicotine enters their bloodstreams.
Consequences of smokeless
tobacco

The most serious health risk
associated with smokeless
tobacco is cancer and
leouplakia.. Smokeless tobacco
products contain at least 28
cancer-causing chemicals. Over
time, these chemicals increase
your risk of cancers in the mouth
and throat. If you use smokeless
tobacco, talk to your doctor
about checking for any
precancerous lesions.
Do you want your lip to look like
this?
What Tobacco does to the body


Smoking can have long term and short term
effects on the body.
Smoking causes diseases of the Respiratory
and Circulatory systems.
Diseases of the Respiratory System

Chronic bronchitis: a
condition in which
the bronchi are
irritated. As cilia
become useless, tar
from cigarette smoke
builds up which
results in chronic
coughing and
excessive mucus
secretion.
Diseases of the Respiratory System

Emphysema: a condition that involves the
destruction of the tiny air sacs in the lungs
through which oxygen is absorbed into the
body. As the walls between sacs are
destroyed, they lose their elasticity and
provide less total surface from which oxygen
can be absorbed. More breaths are required.
So instead of using 5% of one’s energy to
breath they used of to 80% just to take a
breath!
Disease of the Respiratory System

Lung cancer: directly
linked to cigarette
smoking. Leading cause
of cancer deaths among
males. Cilia are
destroyed and extra
mucus can’t be expelled.
Cancerous cells can
grow in these conditions,
block the bronchi and
move to the lungs.
Circulatory System
Diseases of Circulatory





Nicotine makes the heart work
harder and speeds up the pulse.
Smoking constricts the blood
vessels, which cuts down on the
circulation, or blood flow, to the
limbs.
This can result in tingling feelings in
hands and feet of the smoker.
Nicotine contributes to the formation
of plaque buildup in the blood
vessels.
The formation of these fatty deposits
in the arteries increases the chance
of arterioclerosis, or hardening of the
arteries, and gradually clogs the
blood vessels.

This condition increases the risk of
heart attack and stroke.
Smoking during Pregnancy

At least 2,800 deaths of low birth weight
babies are cause by mothers who smoked
while they were pregnant.
 Smoking while pregnant is associated with
small fetal growth, an increased chance of
spontaneous abortion and prenatal death,
increased stillbirths, as well as growth and
development problems.
 Nicotine passes through the placenta,
constricting the blood vessels of the fetus.
Carbon monoxide reduces the oxygen levels
in the mother’s fetus’s blood.
 After the baby is born nicotine can be passed
to the child through breast milk.