Quizzes & Puzzles19 mins ago
Gorey Anti Smoking Ads....
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/he alth-20 805059
Waste of time and money? We must be down to the hard core addicts by now, they must know the dangers. I suppose these may serve to stop the kids starting but going by the numbers of young fools I see smoking probably not.
Waste of time and money? We must be down to the hard core addicts by now, they must know the dangers. I suppose these may serve to stop the kids starting but going by the numbers of young fools I see smoking probably not.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well my grandad was on 60 a day. He got knocked over and died at the age of 83. He was going to the shop to buy a packet of fags!!!
That's a true story...
My other grandad smoked between 80-100 a day. He was told by his doctor that he'd probably be dead within the year and stopped straight away. That was 35 years ago..
That's a true story...
My other grandad smoked between 80-100 a day. He was told by his doctor that he'd probably be dead within the year and stopped straight away. That was 35 years ago..
The psychology isn't right
They marketed a brand of cigarettes called DEATH
http:// www.tum blr.com /tagged /death- cigaret tes
They sold loads of them
They looked cool
They need to be made uncool -maybe if they all came in a Barbie pink wrapper
They marketed a brand of cigarettes called DEATH
http://
They sold loads of them
They looked cool
They need to be made uncool -maybe if they all came in a Barbie pink wrapper
I'm afraid I do not agree with focusing on lung cancer in any case. I don't think enough is done to tell the whole true story about the dangers. How many people are aware that every time they inhale while smoking, brain cells die! This is permanent damage and can attack anywhere in the brain! This was explained to me and shown to me on scans by one of the world's leading Neurosurgeons as well as several leading oncologists. I believe, as did my son, that if youngsters were made more aware of the effect smoking can have on their brain, they may take this a bit more seriously than lung cancer, which many seem to relate to older aged smokers. Perhaps we should be introducing primary school children to the concept of "preventative medicine" / "What we can do to stay healthy". This could be done in a playful manner they would understand, so that by the time they come to secondary school they might not be quite so tempted to do things like smoke. I know many will think this a silly concept, but we teach our little children to tell right from wrong from the start of their lives, so why not this? This would be a good way to spend the tax payers money, would it not?
As you say, Sqad, it is not really accurate to say baldly, "Smoking causes cancer," because it clearly does not always do so.
I don't know how funds devoted to finding a cure for cancer are spent but I wonder how much of it goes into finding out why so many smokers DON'T get it as opposed to finding treatments for those who do.
As others have suggested above, my father and all of my uncles were lifelong smokers and none of them died of the disease.
I don't know how funds devoted to finding a cure for cancer are spent but I wonder how much of it goes into finding out why so many smokers DON'T get it as opposed to finding treatments for those who do.
As others have suggested above, my father and all of my uncles were lifelong smokers and none of them died of the disease.
yes but even if you ignore the indirect costs of smoking and believe the varous figures, say 3bn net from duty then that amounts to a very small portion of the total tax take. Easily recoverable. In reality though the often ignored but expensive indirect costs of smoking would pretty well go away at once so I'd imagine that we'd probably be no worse off.
Also we seem to be getting carried away with semantics. Smoking does not always cause lung cancer and lung cancer is not always caused by smoking the health effects of smoking are many and various, As are the causes of all cancer. It is however more likely that a smoker will contract lung cancer. My mum died of lung cancer a couple of years ago, I cannot remember a time in her life when she was not desperate to give up, many, many attempts, but she was hopelessly adicted. She smoked from the age of about 10 to about 69. I often wonder how long she would have lived as a non smoker.
Its important to drive the message home, and continue with the message for new generations. so the more explicit the adverts the better.
The link between lung cancer and smoking is very strong. Of all lung cancer cases, only around 10% are in people who are non-smokers. To suggest that smoking is not a cause of cancer is an incorrect message, and a dangerous one at that.
Smoking is far and away the most important preventable cause of cancer in the world.
The link between lung cancer and smoking is very strong. Of all lung cancer cases, only around 10% are in people who are non-smokers. To suggest that smoking is not a cause of cancer is an incorrect message, and a dangerous one at that.
Smoking is far and away the most important preventable cause of cancer in the world.
LazyGun.....I agree with almost all you say......but we have a problem....
\\\\Even though smoking is the leading cause of lung cancer, the majority of people currently diagnosed with lung cancer do not smoke; 50% of these cancers occur in former smokers, and 15% in those who have never smoked at all.\\\\
I reiterate...we cannot say that smoking causes cancer........we have to be honest to be credible as a profession.
\\\\Even though smoking is the leading cause of lung cancer, the majority of people currently diagnosed with lung cancer do not smoke; 50% of these cancers occur in former smokers, and 15% in those who have never smoked at all.\\\\
I reiterate...we cannot say that smoking causes cancer........we have to be honest to be credible as a profession.
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