SmokeFreeSocietyEducation. org
Education is the Solution
Solely dedicated to smoking and tobacco use prevention, education and cessation

 

   

"Our actions today determine the fate of our
children's tomorrow."

Rez Seyedin, Founder, Smoke Free Society Education


Smoking should be a parent’s greatest concern
because it is associated with
other risky behaviors and health dangers.

Call to Parents

Want your kids to stay smoke free?
Get involved!

Preventing your kids from smoking through high school doubles the chances they won't smoke as adults.


CDC - Atlanta, Georgia
  
Decline in Teen Smoking Hits a Wall!
 
The campaign to reduce teenagers' smoking has stalled.
 
This has very negative, long-term implications.
 
June, 2008 - The newly released data by
the Centers for Disease Control
 and Prevention (CDC)
show that one of the nation's most-important public health priorities is faltering. The smoking rate among teenagers has shot up to 23%! (more)


FDA chief says
regulating tobacco could be harmful!

Proposed law would give agency power to cut cigarette nicotine levels -
“We could find ourselves in the conundrum of having made a decision about nicotine only to have made the public health radically worse. And that is not the position FDA is in; we approve products that enhance health, not destroy it,” said Dr. Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach, a cancer surgeon.
He said repeatedly that the issue of regulating tobacco is a complex one. 
“What I don’t want to see happen is that we are in a position where we are determining that a cigarette is safe,”  (more)


No butts about it - No safe level of secondhand smoke
US
Surgeon General's 2006, 670 page report presents many studies,
data and support materials to back it up! 
(read more)


"Stopping smoking represents the single most important step that smokers can take to enhance the length and quality of their lives."
— US Surgeon General

New Surgeon General's report expands list of diseases caused by smoking - The report also concludes that quitting smoking has immediate and long-term benefits, reducing risks for diseases caused by smoking and improving health in general. By quitting smoking today a smoker can assure a healthier tomorrow. "We've known for decades that smoking is bad for your health, but this report shows that it's even worse than we knew," Dr. Carmona said. "The toxins from cigarette smoke go everywhere the blood flows. I'm hoping this new information will help motivate people to quit smoking and convince young people not to start in the first place." (full story)

Encourage your loved ones to QUIT smoking!
Over 45 million smokers have quit smoking
in just the past decade! They can too!

Do it today, for tomorrow could be
too late!

QUIT SMOKING OR LOSE YOUR JOB! A growing trend among companies to go smoke free to save lives and cut cost:
Lockheed Martin to Go Smoke Free -
Fort Worth (TX), Lockheed unveiled plans to eliminate cigarettes and all tobacco products from its campus-style properties starting January 1, 2007. It's part of an effort to rein in rising healthcare expenses, which now cost the company about $800 million annually. In 2008, the company also plans to begin collecting higher insurance premiums from employees who smoke. Wow! (full story)
Scotts Miracle-Gro has already banned smoking on the job. In October workers must stop altogether or find a new job. (full story)

Secondhand smoke and breast cancer linked - A California scientific panel will review a draft report showing a potential link between secondhand smoke and an increased risk of breast cancer. The conclusion that secondhand smoke causes breast cancer, particularly in younger women, challenges conventional scientific thinking because most studies, until recently, had found no connection between female smokers and breast cancer. Overall, women exposed to secondhand smoke have up to a 90% greater risk of breast cancer, the report says. It says secondhand smoke kills as many as 73,400 a year in the USA. (full story)

Real cost of smoking reaches $40 per pack - Duke health economists calculated this sum by analyzing all the costs of smoking -- personally, to the smoker's family and to society at large. America’s 51 million cigarette smokers already bemoan the high cost of their habit, but what would they do if they knew that the real price, over a lifetime of smoking, amounts to nearly $40 per pack or $9,500,000 for a couple? The tremendous toll of tobacco use, besides the killing of more than 400,000 Americans, costs our nation more than $75 billion in health care expenditures every year. (full story)

Secondhand smoke and its toll on nonsmoker’s statistics were released by the National Cancer Institute - Non-smokers (our loved ones) receive the following equivalents of cigarette smoking, according to Katherine Hammond, Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley’s School of Public Health:

    • 1.5 cigarettes = Sitting in the non-smoking section of a restaurant
    • 3 cigarettes = Living in a pack-a-day smoker’s home
    • 4 cigarettes = Sitting in a smoky bar for two hours
    • 4 cigarettes = Riding in a car one hour with a smoker


Can lung cancer be cured? Luckily, lung cancer is one of the most preventable cancer around. The easiest ways to reduce your risk are to avoid secondhand smoke or if you smoke, quit. Did you know that lung cancer kills more people in the U.S. than any other cancer? This deadly disease will be diagnosed in 172,570 men and women this year alone. The key to protecting your health is to know who's at risk for the disease and how to spot its early symptoms. (full story)


The health consequences of smoking on the human body - This interactive animation outlines the effects of smoking on the different organs of the body based on the findings of the 2004 Surgeon General's Report. MUST SEE  3-D animation  of the consequences of smoking on the human body!. Click on Flash if you have a high speed internet connection or click on HTML if you don't.

Nearly 650 million people or half the people that smoke today will eventually be killed by tobacco - Tobacco is currently responsible for the death of one in ten adults worldwide or about 5 million deaths each year. If current smoking patterns continue, it will cause some 10 million deaths each year by 2020. (full story)

Five years later - The 1998 tobacco settlement - A broken promise to our children. Disturbingly, in the past two years the states have cut funding for their tobacco prevention programs by more than a quarter, and several states have completely eviscerated some of the most successful and promising tobacco prevention and cessation programs in history. Each day over 4,400 youth as young as 8 years old, will take their first puff on a cigarette and nearly 3,000 will become regular smokers. 1 out of 3 of them will die from a disease caused by their smoking. Unless we do something to stop this trend, 5,000,000 young people who are alive today will die from using tobacco (Click here to help)

Medicare to help kick smoking habit - Medicare said it intends to pay for counseling to help some of the nation's 4 million older smokers kick the habit. Medicare beneficiaries who smoke and have smoking-related diseases or take certain medicines will be eligible for Medicare-covered counseling when the proposal takes effect next year. Medicare would pay for up to four counseling sessions. If that doesn't suffice, smokers could get a second round of counseling. (full story)


Tobacco takes silent victims: America’s Children - Unintended exposure to secondhand smoke is critical burden on America’s children, says foundation responsible for effective truth® campaign. Passive exposure to secondhand smoke, also called environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), puts young people at risk for serious health consequences, including low birth weight, sudden infant death syndrome, asthma and ear infections. While the health consequences are devastating, the significant economic costs of treating children with smoking-related illnesses. (full story)


Cigarettes: Leading Cause of Fire Deaths - Children account for more than 35% of all fire and burn injuries and deaths. Children account for more than 35% of all fire and burn injuries and deaths. According to the National Fire Data Center, 1,052 residential fire deaths were caused by cigarettes in 1996. In fact, 5,000 children are injured from contact with lit cigarettes and lighters. Fires and burns are the second leading cause of accidental death for children under age 4. (full story)

Pets in smoking households have an increased risk of various cancers - New Evidence that Second-hand Smoke Harms Pets - And your furry friends don't just inhale smoke; the smoke particles are also trapped in their fur and ingested when they groom themselves with their tongues. Of all the compelling reasons to quit smoking, this one should make pet lovers sit up and take notice: there's ample scientific evidence to suggest that secondhand smoke can cause cancer in companion animals. (full story)


Shock pictures for Europe smokers -  BRUSSELS, Belgium --The European Union has launched an aggressive anti-smoking drive with grisly photos of rotten lungs, throat tumors and decayed teeth that it hopes will be used on cigarette packets. (full story)  Photos - Tumor and gums with periodontitist caused by smoking. (more) 

Cigarette Smoking Among Adults - One of the national health objectives for 2010 is to reduce the prevalence of cigarette smoking among adults to 12% from current 22%. But the rate of decline is not sufficient to meet the national health objective for 2010. Comprehensive, sustained interventions that reduce the rate of smoking initiation and increase the rate of cessation are needed to further the decline in cigarette smoking among adults. (full story)


African-American teen smoking has increased 56%! - According to the CDC, cigarette smoking among African-American teens increased 56% in the 1990s. This increase is particularly striking, since African-American youths had the greatest decline of tobacco use among minorities during the 1970s and 1980s, but the steepest increase in use in the 1990s. (full story)

One puff of smoke can damage DNA - Researchers say mutated cells increase risk of cancer, heart disease -- Just one puff of a cigarette could damage a smoker’s DNA, the first step to cancer and heart disease, researchers said on Friday. (full story)

WHO stops hiring smokers - The World Health Organization (WHO) became the largest international employer to stop hiring smokers in an effort to promote its campaign against tobacco use. WHO job advertisements now carry the statement,” WHO has a smoke-free environment and does not recruit smokers or other tobacco users.” The agency is offering programs to help staff stop smoking. (full story)

Smoke gets in their eyes - Despite overwhelming evidence that smoking kills, 46 million still do It. What are they thinking? You see them huddled against the wind outside office buildings, cupping hands to protect tiny flames. You see them in their cars, faces blurred by clouds of smoke. You smell them when they're sitting next to you on the Metro. You hear them ask the salesclerk for a pack of cigarettes, and you wonder: Who are these people? (full story)


Smoky bars top roads for health risk - Which is more harmful to your health -- a smoky bar or a city street filled with diesel truck fumes? Well, you might want to skip your next happy hour! Smoky bars and casinos have up to 50 times more cancer-causing particles in the air than highways and city streets clogged with diesel trucks at rush hour, according to a study that also shows indoor air pollution virtually disappears once smoking is banned. (full story)

ACS: Half of cancer deaths preventable - More than 60 percent of all cancer deaths could be prevented if Americans stopped smoking, exercised more, ate healthier food and got recommended cancer screenings, the American Cancer Society reported. And Americans could realistically cut the death rate in half, the report says. This year over 1.3 million Americans will learn they have cancer and 563,700 will die of it. "The American Cancer Society estimates that in 2005, more than 168,140 cancer deaths will be caused by tobacco use alone," the organization said in a statement. (full story)


Click here to read what physicians and healthcare professionals are saying on smoking and quitting.

 
Click here for news clips, articles and many more related stories we have gathered and archived over the years.
 

Our Mission

Click here to read about our mission and what you can do to help.
 

Tobacco
& You

Click here to view the daily affects and influence of tobacco and its toll on your life and your children's lives.
 

Tobacco
& Kids

Click here to view the daily affects and influence of tobacco and its toll on your life and your children's lives.
 
Click here to view the daily affects and influence of tobacco and its toll on your life and your children's lives.
 
Click here to view the list of concerning events and stories related to smoking and tobacco use and how to submit a story.

Smoking causes about 90% of lung cancer deaths in men and nearly 80% in women! That's over 73,000 women who will die of lung cancer each year!
 
WARNING
There is no safe tobacco product.
The use and/or exposure to secondhand smoke of any tobacco product
can cause cancer and other adverse health effects. This includes
all forms of tobacco including cigarettes, cigars, pipes and spit tobacco; mentholated, "low-tar," "naturally grown," or "additive free."
  
— Office of the US Surgeon General

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DID YOU KNOW?

Nearly
650 million
people
or half the
people that
smoke today
will eventually
be killed by
tobacco!

(read more)

In the United States, an estimated 
25.1 million men
(23.4 percent) & 20.9 million women
(18.5 percent)
are smokers.
These people are at higher risk of heart attack and stroke.
(read more)

HERE IS WHY:

The tobacco industry
spends over
$15.4 billion a year
marketing their deadly
products in the USA
alone, most of it
reaching kids.
Click here for more

Great News!
Smoke Free Society Education - Founders take message to Capitol Hill that was well received and supported.
September 5, 2007

Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.  Tobacco vs. Kids: Where America Draws the Line

If you’re
married to a
smoker, you
have nearly
30% greater
risk of
developing
lung cancer!
Click here to read more

43,000
children are
orphaned
each year

because of
smoking-related
deaths!

Celebrities
on Smoking

Click here

"I found that in cases where a cancer diagnosis was wrong, the patient always turned out to be a non-smoker.
But when the diagnosis turned out to be correct, the patient was always revealed to be a smoker."

Sir Richard Doll

The Global
Death Clock
is a reminder

that tobacco kills
an average of
10 persons
every minute.
That's over
5,000,000 people
a year!

Don't become
a statistic.
Quit today!

Smoking
has been
called
slow-motion
suicide
!
Click here to read more

Live a happy,
healthy and
smoke free life!

DISCLAIMER
Don't
bargain
with your life!

This web site's health-related information and resources are not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice or for the care that patients receive from their physicians.
Click here
to read more

What's at Risk?
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