Smoking and Your Health
When your parents were young, people could buy cigarettes and smoke pretty
much anywhere - even in hospitals! Ads for cigarettes were all over the place.
Today we're more aware about how bad smoking is for our health. Smoking is
restricted or banned in almost all public places and cigarette companies are no
longer allowed to advertise on buses or trains, billboards, TV, and in many
magazines.
Almost everyone knows that smoking causes cancer, emphysema, and heart disease;
that it can shorten your life by 14 years or more; and that the habit can cost a
smoker thousands of dollars a year. So how come people are still lighting up?
The answer, in a word, is addiction.
Once You Start, It's Hard to Stop
Smoking is a hard habit to break because tobacco contains nicotine, which is
highly addictive. Like heroin or other addictive drugs, the body and mind
quickly become so used to the nicotine in cigarettes that a person needs to have
it just to feel normal.
Almost no smoker begins as an adult. Statistics show that about nine out of 10
tobacco users start before they're 18 years old. Some teens who smoke say they
start because they think it helps them look older (it does - if yellow teeth and
wrinkles are the look you want). Others smoke because they think it helps them
relax (it doesn't - the heart actually beats faster while a person's smoking).
Some light up as a way to feel rebellious or to set themselves apart (which
works if you want your friends to hang out someplace else while you're puffing
away). Some start because their friends smoke - or just because it gives them
something to do.
Some people, especially girls, start smoking because they think it may help keep
their weight down. The illnesses that smoking can cause, like lung diseases or
cancer, do cause weight loss - but that's not a very good way for people to fit
into their clothes!
Another reason people start smoking is because their family members do. Most
adults who started smoking in their teens never expected to become addicted.
That's why people say it's just so much easier to not start smoking at all.
The cigarette ads from when your parents were young convinced many of them that
the habit was glamorous, powerful, or exciting - even though it's essentially a
turnoff: smelly, expensive, and unhealthy. Cigarette ads from the 1940s even
showed doctors recommending cigarettes as a way to relax!
Cigarette ads still show smokers as attractive and hip, sophisticated and
elegant, or rebellious and cool. The good news is that these ads aren't as
visible and are less effective today than they used to be: Just as doctors are
more savvy about smoking today than they were a generation ago, teens are more
aware of how manipulative advertising can be. The government has also passed
laws limiting where and how tobacco companies are allowed to advertise to help
prevent young kids from getting hooked on smoking.
How Smoking Affects Your Health
There are no physical reasons to start smoking - the body doesn't need tobacco the way it needs food, water, sleep, and exercise. In fact, many of the chemicals in cigarettes, like nicotine and cyanide, are actually poisons that can kill in high enough doses. The body's smart and it goes on the defense when it's being poisoned. For this reason, many people find it takes several tries to get started smoking: First-time smokers often feel pain or burning in the throat and lungs, and some people feel sick or even throw up the first few times they try tobacco.
The consequences of this poisoning happen gradually. Over the long term, smoking leads people to develop health problems like cancer, emphysema (breakdown of lung tissue), organ damage, and heart disease. These diseases limit a person's ability to be normally active - and can be fatal. Each time a smoker lights up, that single cigarette takes about 5 to 20 minutes off the person's life.
Smokers not only develop wrinkles and yellow teeth, they also lose bone
density, which increases their risk of osteoporosis (ahs-tee-o-puh-row-sus), a
condition that causes older people to become bent over and their bones to break
more easily). Smokers also tend to be less active than nonsmokers because
smoking affects lung power. Smoking can also cause fertility problems in both
men and women and can impact sexual health in males.
The consequences of smoking may seem very far off to many teens, but long-term
health problems aren't the only hazard of smoking. Nicotine and the other toxins
in cigarettes, cigars, and pipes can affect a person's body quickly, which means
that teen smokers experience many of these problems:
Smoking Is Expensive
Not only does smoking damage health, it costs an arm and a leg. Depending on where you live, smoking a pack of cigarettes a day can cost about $1,800 dollars a year. That adds up. It's money you could save or spend on something for yourself.
Kicking Butt and Staying Smoke Free
All forms of tobacco - cigarettes, pipes, cigars, and smokeless tobacco - are
hazardous. It doesn't help to substitute products that seem like they're
better for you than regular cigarettes - such as filter or low-tar cigarettes.
The only thing that really helps a person avoid the problems associated with
smoking is staying smoke free. This isn't always easy, especially if everyone
around you is smoking and offering you cigarettes. It may help to have your
reasons for not smoking ready for times you may feel the pressure, such as "I
just don't like it" or "I want to stay in shape for soccer" (or football,
basketball, or other sport).
The good news for people who don't smoke or who want to quit is that studies
show that the number of teens who smoke is dropping dramatically. Today, only
about 22% of high school students smoke, down from 36% just 7 years ago.
If you do smoke and want to quit, there's more information and support out there
than ever. Different approaches work for different people - for some, quitting
cold turkey is best, whereas others find that a slower approach is the way to
go. Some people find that it helps to go to a support group especially for
teens; these are sometimes sponsored by local hospitals or organizations like
the American Cancer Society. And the Internet offers a number of good resources.
Check out some of these by clicking on the Resources tab to the right of this
article. When quitting, it can be helpful to realize that the first few days are
the hardest, and it's normal to have a few relapses before you manage to quit
for good.
Staying smoke free will give you a whole lot more of everything - more energy,
better performance, better looks, more money in your pocket, and, in the long
run, more life to live!
Six Facts about Smoking
1. Most people start using tobacco before they finish high school. This means
that if you stay smoke-free in school, you will probably never smoke.
2. Most teens who smoke are addicted to nicotine. They want to quit smoking, but
they can't . When they try to quit, they experience nasty withdrawal symptoms --
just like adults do.
3. Tobacco is often the first drug used by kids who use alcohol and illegal
drugs like marijuana.
4. Kids who start smoking are more likely to get lower grades in school. They
tend to hang out with other kids who smoke. They may have a low self-image, and
they don't know how to say no to tobacco.
5. Cigarette advertisements are designed to make people think that smoking is
cool and that everybody does it. These misleading ads appear to increase kids'
risk of smoking.
6. Finally, here's some good news! People working in their communities -- kids
who warn each other about the dangers of smoking, for example, and programs that
make it harder for stores to sell cigarettes to kids -- are helping to keep kids
away from tobacco.