We have all been to places that allow smoking outside the doors, It is a horrible experience. You walk out the doors and are greeted by a big smelly puff of stinky smoke, and dirty ashtrays with lit cigarettes smoldering in them. Not very pleasant, this is why I feel that CTC should remain a smoke free campus. Smoking is dirty, is a potential fire danger, and the second hand smoke causes health risks.…
How often do you see cigarette buds on the streets or on the side walks as you walk or drive by? Doesn't it make the environment look trashy? I believe it is a good idea for Central Texas College to remain a smoke-free campus. If there is no smoking allowed on the campus, the campus would look much cleaner and smell cleaner. I think it should be smoke free because it will not only make the campus look clean, it will also not distract students that don't like the smell. For some reasons like students would have to walk as far as off campus to go on a "smoke break" would take them forever to come back to class and not be able to stay focused because they may be addicted and need that cigarette to concentrate.…
Tobacco laws and policies have changed in concerns to the use and promotion of products in NSW since 1995 in a lot of ways! The packaging of a cigarettes box was just the smoke brand, advertising at sporting events was allowed and you could smoke anywhere back then but now the look of the smoke box is being questioned by parliament, promoting smoking is not permitted by law and you can only smoke in a handful of public venues.…
Tobacco was the first crop grown for money in North America. In 1964 the Surgeon General of the U.S. wrote a report about the dangers of cigarette smoking. He said that the nicotine and tar in cigarettes cause lung cancer. Due to his report by the 1980’s they developed new cigarettes with lower amounts of nicotine and better filters (History & Economics of Tobacco).The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) launched the first ever paid national tobacco campaign. In March of 2012 they began to use real people instead of actors (Centers of Disease Control and Prevention). The illustration of loading a revolver with cigarettes is a strong visual way to get people’s attention on the harms of smoking. Also, the facts listed are making…
It is a known and indisputable fact that smoking lowers the quality of life and lifespan and increases chronic health risks for all people who smoke. Unfortunately, the State of Kentucky has the highest smoking rate in the nation. Of the adult population, 29% identify as smokers in the state compared to 19% across the rest of the nation (Center for Disease Control 2011). The smoking affects health care costs by adding a $1.5 billion additional burden; costs the state $2.3 billion in losses in productivity and cost about $580 per household in state and federal tax burdens due to smoke-caused government expenditures (Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids 2013).…
The American College Health Association (ACHA) has recommended that colleges adopt a tobacco-free campus policy to create a healthier and greener environment for students, faculty, staff, visitors, volunteers, contractors and service representatives, stating it "acknowledges and supports the findings of the Surgeon General that tobacco use in any form, active and/or passive, is a significant health factor…Environmental tobacco smoke has been classified as a Class-A carcinogen. There is no safe level of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke."…
Cigarettes are the number one cause of death in the U.S. and yet they are still on the shelves. People know the damage tobacco does to the body, and yet they still continue to smoke, chew, and sniff it. Cigarettes and tobacco products needs to be criminalized. Smoking is the number one cause of cancer in the United States. About 50 million people smoke cigarettes in the United States.…
Currie, D. (2011, February 8). Study finds city-wide smoking ban reduces risks of preteen birth. _The Nations Health_, 40, 10.…
Place strategies in the tobacco quit campaign are intended to either make tobacco products less available to the general population or make help more accessible to those trying to quit. This strategy includes several tactics intended to focus into different populations: first we have active smokers wanting to quit, for those help needs to be easily accessible; second we have nonsmokers whose need to be protected from secondhand smoke; third we have the underage kids who not only need to be protected from the harmful events of tobacco but also need to understand that using tobacco products is not cool; the last group is composed by active smokers not intending to quit but that need to understand that their actions have effects in others.…
At West Virginia University, a proposal to ban smoking on campuses has been made. As with any new ban, there will be some controversy, however, smoking bans have become more and more popular in the recent years. West Virginia University and other Universities have a right to ban smoking because they must protect the rights of their non-smoking student’s health (Fortin, 2007). As of 2011, over 500 college campuses across the country have eliminated smokers, creating a better and healthier environment and even reducing the number of smokers (Steinberg, 2011). “Since a smoking ban was implanted on campus at Michigan State University, more students sought assistance in quitting (USA Today, 2011). If people wish to do harm to their bodies by using such a destructive substance, they should be forced to do so in an area far from others who do not wish to inhale these chemical toxins. “Comprehensive smoking bans can reduce secondhand smoke exposure among nonsmokers” (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2007). By banning smoking on WVU campuses, students will be breathing cleaner, fresher air and will not have to worry about what might be poisoning their air.…
It’s rude, crude and all but guaranteed to get many parents and sticklers for good manners up in arms.…
Tobacco laws have started as early as the 1970s (ACOSH, 2010). Government has implanted laws, such that of the Tobacco Act (1987), which goals are to discourage the smoking of tobacco, encouraging non-smokers; in particular young people to not start smoking, to limit the exposure of children and young people to the persuasion of smoking, to encourage and assists smokers to give up smoking, and finally the promotion of good well being and illness prevention. The tobacco act of 1897, had over the years since, been reformed, and it seems like there is no stopping now. To further reinforce its initial goal, recently the Australian government reformed this Tobacco Act. The Australian government had announced, the 25% increase in tobacco tax, plain…
Another problem is that cigarette butts are left everywhere and this could create a fire hazard. Students carelessly throw away their cigarettes butts without bothering to put them out. There are designated bins, especially for cigarettes where one could put it out and throw it away but no one actually seems to do it. Imagine, on a hot summer day someone might forget to put the cigarette out and throw it out onto the grass. The grass could catch on fire, and spread, and burn the whole building down.…
Studies have documented that even among US adolescent tobacco users who only used a single tobacco product on 1-2 days during the previous month, many reported symptoms of tobacco dependence, including strong cravings (14%), irritability and restlessness when not using tobacco (11%), strong desire to use the product (6%), and wanting to use the tobacco product within 30 minutes of awakening (1%. Preventing youths from beginning use of any tobacco product is important to tobacco use prevention and control strategies in the United States. The effects of early initiation also might hold true for users of other tobacco products, given that exposure to nicotine is the main cause of tobacco product dependence. This report highlights the importance…
A national standard for tobacco regulation is more important than allowing states to set their own standards for tobacco regulation.…