SMOKING

inhalation and exhalation of the fumes of burning tobacco in cigars and cigarettes and pipes. Some persons draw the smoke into their lungs; others do not. Smoking was probably first practiced by the indigenous peoples of the Western Hemisphere. Originally used in religious rituals, and in some instances for medicinal purposes, smoking and the use of tobacco became a widespread practice by the late 1500s. Tobacco was introduced into Europe by the explorers of the New World; however, many rulers prohibited its use and penalized offenders. By the end of the 19th cent. mass production of cigarettes had begun, and the smoking of cigarettes became prevalent as the use of cigars and pipes declined. Despite controversy as to the effects of smoking and bans on smoking by certain religious groups, the use of tobacco continued to increase.

Health Effects

Smoking is considered a health hazard because tobacco smoke contains nicotine, a poisonous alkaloid, and other harmful substances such as carbon monoxide, acrolein, ammonia, prussic acid, and a number of aldehydes and tars; in all tobacco contains some 4,000 chemicals. In 1964 definitive proof that cigarette smoking is a serious health hazard was contained in a report by the Surgeon General's Advisory Committee on Health, appointed by the U.S. Public Health Service. The committee drew evidence from numerous studies conducted over decades. They concluded that a smoker has a significantly greater chance of contracting lung cancer than a nonsmoker, the rate varying according to factors such as the number of cigarettes smoked per day, the number of years the subject smoked, and the time in the person's life when he or she began smoking. Cigarette smoking was also found to be an important cause of cancers of the esophagus, nasopharynx, mouth, larynx, kidney, and bladder as well as a cause of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, emphysema, and heart disease, stroke, and other cardiovascular diseases. Since then it has been found to be an independent risk factor in male impotence. Smoking also increases risks associated with oral contraceptive use and exposure to occupational hazards, such as asbestos. Pipe and cigar smokers, if they do not inhale, are not as prone to lung cancer as cigarette smokers, but they are as likely to develop cancers of the mouth, larynx, and esophagus. Those who use snuff or chewing tobacco (sometimes called "smokeless tobacco") run a greater risk of developing cancer of the mouth.

Inhalation of tobacco smoke by nonsmokers has been found to increase the risk of heart disease and respiratory problems; this has created a movement for smokeless environments in public spaces, including government buildings, office buildings, and restaurants. Fetal damage can be caused if a mother smokes or is exposed to smoke during pregnancy. Children of smokers have a higher risk of asthma and lung disease.

Regulation of Smoking

Because of mounting evidence of health risks, television advertisements for cigarettes were banned beginning in 1971. In the 1980s, Congress began to require stronger warning labels on all print advertising; soon afterward it banned smoking on domestic air flights. A 1988 report of the Surgeon General of the United States recognized nicotine as an addictive substance, leading the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to consider treating nicotine as any other addictive drug and implementing stricter regulations. The authority of the FDA to regulate smoking was, however, denied by the Supreme Court. The habit of smoking continues to increase in the young despite the illegality of cigarette sales to those under 18 years of age in all 50 states.

The Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, a treaty adopted by World Health Organization members in 2003, will establish international standards for antismoking measures once it is ratified. The convention creates restrictions on the marketing and sale of tobacco products and require health warnings on packages of cigarettes. Indoor air quality laws, high taxes on tobacco, and meansures against cigarette smuggling are encouraged under the pact.

Legal Battles

In the mid- and late 1990s the tobacco industry in the United States faced grave legal and financial threats. Under heavy attack from states seeking compensation to recover costs for smoking-related health care, from the federal government seeking further regulation, and from individual smokers seeking damages for illness, the major cigarette producers sought ways to protect themselves. After a tentative $368 billion settlement (1997) with state attorneys and plaintiffs' lawyers fell apart, lawsuits were brought against the industry by Florida, Minnesota, Mississippi, and Texas; the suits were settled for $40 billion, to be paid over 25 years. In 1998 the remaining 46 states accepted a $206 billion plan to settle lawsuits they had filed against the industry. Individual lawsuits continued to pose potential significant financial threats.

Bibliography

See publications of the Office on Smoking and Health of the Centers for Disease Control and publications of the American Cancer Society and the American Lung Association; see also E. C. Hammond, I. J. Selikoff, and J. Chung, "Asbestos exposure, cigarette smoking and death rates" from Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences (1979); R. J. Troyer and G. E. Markle, Cigarettes: The Battle over Smoking (1983); P. Taylor, The Smoke Ring (1984); Imperial Cancer Research Fund, World Health Organization, and American Cancer Society, Mortality from Smoking in Developed Countries 1950–2000 (1994); R. Kluger, Ashes to Ashes (1996); S. A. Glantz, J. Slade, L. A. Bero, P. Hanauer, D. E. Barnes, The Cigarette Papers (1996).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Smoking  - 23400 results

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...I ovi 10 1 AIL(tverview for Teens, Smoking 1 begins as a choice. This book provides...Medicine physician John F. Setaro look at smoking among 1 young 1 people and offer the latest statistics and facts about teen smoking and 1 why American adults are smoking...
Smoking, Health and Personality Smoking, Health and Personality H. J. EYSENCK BASIC BOOKS, Inc., Publishers...of Lung Cancer 119 8 Giving up Smoking ? 138 Epilogue: Where theres...
Smoking and the Workplace Recent Titles from Quorum Books...Regulation in Marketing: A Practitioners Guide Ray O. Werner Smoking and the Workplace ISSUES AND ANSWERS FOR HUMAN RESOURCES...Cataloging-in-Publication Data Timmins, William M. Smoking and the workplace : issues and answers for human resources...
...iiJliJ_ISQ.llifl /. A Teens Guide to Smoking-Related Health Issues...OLE4RINO TEE met A Teens Guide to Smoking-Related Health Issues 1<N<!GlHI oN Sc14...CLEARING THE HAZE A Teens Guide to Smoking-Related Health Issues by Joan Esherick...
Smoking, Drinking, and Drug Use in Young Adulthood The Impacts...Wadsworth/ OMalley/ Johnston/ Schulenberg Smoking, Drinking, and Drug Use in Young Adulthood: The Impacts of New Freedoms and New Responsibilities Smoking, Drinking, and Drug Use in Young Adulthood The Impacts...
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journal articles on: Smoking  - 7542 results

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Smoking behavior, information sources, and consumption values of teenagers: Implications for public policy and...values as a strategic framework for evaluating the general failure of intervention strategies for teenage smoking initiation. Extremely high smoking consideration-to-trial rates and rapid cessation by occasional smokers provide narrow but unused strategic...
...Take: The Effect of Postpartum Maternal Smoking on Childhood Asthma. by Joseph J...and premature death in children and non-smoking...secondhand smoke exposure from parental smoking and the onset of childhood asthma" (Report...
The role of smoking in the lives of low-income pregnant adolescents...INTRODUCTION Over the past decade, cigarette smoking among female adolescents has emerged as...Between 1975 and 1985, initiation of smoking declined among young men while it increased...
...Peer Influences on Adolescent Cigarette Smoking: A Prospective Sibling Analysis...prospective predictors of adolescent cigarette smoking onset. These results were compared to...influences were significant predictors of smoking onset when shared influences were controlled...
Differences in Students Smoking-Related Knowledge, Attitudes, and Behaviors...LITERATURE REVIEW The prevalence of smoking among adolescents in China has increased...Behaviors indicated that the overall smoking prevalence declined slightly from 1996...
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magazine articles on: Smoking  - 5532 results

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The smoking gun by Alice Horrigan Despite...dangling from her fingers as she took a smoking break outside a Norwalk, Connecticut clothing...workplace should be kept smoke free. Theres no smoking inside my store. I think you should pick...
Smoking, Health and Hypocrisy. by Edward T. Chase...tobacco companies to make them pay for the costs of treating smoking-related illnesses and the Justice Department considering...hadnt been much exercised about the flap over cigarette smoking and health. It was a de gustibus non disputandum est kind...
Effective Smoking Cessation Interventions by Ronald A. Savrin EDUCATIONAL...physicians should be able to: List the benefits of smoking cessation. Describe their role in managing smoking cessation. Contrast and compare different pharmacologic...
Is Smoking Finally out of Style? The U.S.--the...1,545--a fall of 46%. As the costs of smoking become clear, pressure to phase out cigarettes...has called for strong measures to reduce smoking. The 4,900,000 annual deaths from inhaling...
Still Smoking after All These Years. by Maria...more restrictive legislation, prohibiting smoking in all government-related institutions...seatbelts were largely abandoned. The new smoking bans, like many other governmental pronouncements...
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Smoking Ban Could Burn Welsh Businesses. Byline: By Rosa Fernandez The news that a smoking ban is to come into practice in Wales next year may not...could be hit by fines running into thousands of pounds THE smoking ban in Wales is going to change the way businesses operate...
Smoking Ban Is Encouraging Thousands More to Quit the Habit. Byline: By Darren Devine Western Mail Wales smoking ban has seen a massive increase in the number of smokers...Wales lead and becomes the final part of the UK to outlaw smoking in enclosed public places. In the weeks leading to Wales...
Smoking Ban? This Isonewe Prepared Earlier. TOP CHEFS LEAD THE...lobbying and warnings of chaos, MPs voted yesterday to ban smoking in all pubs, clubs and restaurants. But a poll of the best...wine. Some chain restaurants have been slower to introduce smoking bans, but one-third of the major chains have introduced...
Smoking Ban Fails to Curb the Habit. Byline: Daniel Martin THE ban on smoking in public has failed to increase the number of people quitting...among women. The figures, coming after years of declining smoking rates, are a massive blow to Labours public heath policy...
Smoking Foes Try to Stop Parents from Lighting Up; Issue Smolders...Byline: Tarron Lively, THE WASHINGTON TIMES Anti-smoking activists who are driving cigarettes from public places...Oklahoma and Vermont - forbidding foster parents from smoking around children. Parental smoking also has become a critical...
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encyclopedia articles on: Smoking  - 57 results

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SMOKING inhalation and exhalation of the fumes of burning...persons draw the smoke into their lungs; others do not. Smoking was probably first practiced by the indigenous peoples...rituals, and in some instances for medicinal purposes, smoking and the use of tobacco became a widespread practice by...
PIPE SMOKING The habit of smoking various substances probably arose independently in different parts...from America in the 16th cent. Among the Native Americans, pipe smoking was practiced long before the arrival of Europeans. The peace...
...tubular rolls of tobacco designed for smoking . Cigars consist of filler leaves held...link between lung cancer and cigarette smoking. In 1964, Luther Terry, the U.S. surgeon...between 1974 and 1977. Recognizing that the smoking of tobacco is addictive, pharmaceutical...
FISH CURING Methods of curing fish by drying, salting, smoking, and pickling, or by combinations of these processes have been...extensively salted are cod, herring, mackerel, and haddock. Smoking preserves fish by drying, by deposition of creosote ingredients...
...85% of U.S. lung cancer deaths (see smoking ). The incidence of lung cancer in other countries follows their smoking patterns. Some other carcinogens known...Americans, even after adjusting for smoking. Types of Lung Cancer Lung cancers...
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