Cigarrete smoking has been identified as the biggest cause of heart disease which includes a variety of problems, inlcuding high blood pressure, high blood cholestrol, hardening of the arteries, chest pain, heart attacks, and strokes. Smoking account for about one in five deaths from cardiovascular disease and risk increases with the number of cigarretes smoked each day.
A comprehensive law to regulate the manufacturing, advertising distribution and consumption of tobacco products in Nigeria. It is aimed at domesticating the WHO's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC)
Search This Blog
Friday, October 16, 2009
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
News Alert: Osun State
Osun State government has successfully passed the law prohibiting smoking in public places within the state.
The Journey...
More detail to come...
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Text messaging found to help smokers
REUTERS
October 8, 2009 05:01AMT
Text messaging can help smokers quit the habit, according to an international study.
A review of four trials conducted in New Zealand, Britain and Norway, found that programs to help people stop smoking that included text-messaged advice doubled the chances that smokers would be able to kick the habit for up to a year.
The trials, involving 2,600 smokers, used text messages as a way to give smokers daily advice and encouragement and also offered support when quitters needed it the most.
If they found themselves craving nicotine, for example, they could text "crave" to the program and get immediate advice on what to do.
"We know that stopping smoking can be really difficult and most people take several attempts to quit successfully," researcher Robyn Whittaker from the University of Auckland in New Zealand told Reuters Health.
"It is important to be able to offer lots of different options for extra support."
Two of the studies looked at programs that only involved text messages, finding that the service doubled the odds that smokers would quit over six weeks.
The other two studies focused on a program in Norway that used text messages, emails and a dedicated Web site. It found that smokers who used the program were twice as likely to report abstinence for up to one year.
The findings appeared in the Cochrane Library, a publication of the international research organization the Cochrane Collaboration.
However the studies found the majority of smokers taking part in the studies did not succeed in quitting, regardless of whether they had text-message help.
One of the programs in the study, called Txt2Quit, is running in New Zealand, with government funding, and automatically sends users two to three text messages per day shortly before a designated "quit date," and for one month afterwards.
A recent review of people who took part in the program's first year found that one-third did not smoke four weeks after their quit date. That figure dropped to 16 percent after 22 weeks.
Whittaker said it is estimated that only about 5 percent of smokers are able to kick the habit without any help.
But text messages could serve as one more tool in the smoking-cessation arsenal and may be effective for some people because they can get help when cravings strike.
"The frequent messages can also act as a good reminder and motivation to keep going," Whittaker said.
October 8, 2009 05:01AMT
Text messaging can help smokers quit the habit, according to an international study.
A review of four trials conducted in New Zealand, Britain and Norway, found that programs to help people stop smoking that included text-messaged advice doubled the chances that smokers would be able to kick the habit for up to a year.
The trials, involving 2,600 smokers, used text messages as a way to give smokers daily advice and encouragement and also offered support when quitters needed it the most.
If they found themselves craving nicotine, for example, they could text "crave" to the program and get immediate advice on what to do.
"We know that stopping smoking can be really difficult and most people take several attempts to quit successfully," researcher Robyn Whittaker from the University of Auckland in New Zealand told Reuters Health.
"It is important to be able to offer lots of different options for extra support."
Two of the studies looked at programs that only involved text messages, finding that the service doubled the odds that smokers would quit over six weeks.
The other two studies focused on a program in Norway that used text messages, emails and a dedicated Web site. It found that smokers who used the program were twice as likely to report abstinence for up to one year.
The findings appeared in the Cochrane Library, a publication of the international research organization the Cochrane Collaboration.
However the studies found the majority of smokers taking part in the studies did not succeed in quitting, regardless of whether they had text-message help.
One of the programs in the study, called Txt2Quit, is running in New Zealand, with government funding, and automatically sends users two to three text messages per day shortly before a designated "quit date," and for one month afterwards.
A recent review of people who took part in the program's first year found that one-third did not smoke four weeks after their quit date. That figure dropped to 16 percent after 22 weeks.
Whittaker said it is estimated that only about 5 percent of smokers are able to kick the habit without any help.
But text messages could serve as one more tool in the smoking-cessation arsenal and may be effective for some people because they can get help when cravings strike.
"The frequent messages can also act as a good reminder and motivation to keep going," Whittaker said.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Health Rish Of Smoking...Death on the increase
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Nigeria's smoking habit
Tobacco kills close to five million people yearly worldwide with over 70 percent of deaths occurring in developing countries including Nigeria where about 12 percent of the population are addicted to nicotine.
Now the Nigerian parliament seems to have responded with a tobacco control bill.
If passed, this could be the biggest tobacco crackdown in the history of Nigeria.
From Lagos, the BBC's Fidelis Mbah, reports.
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Smokers more prone to developing tuberculosis
Although, smoking per se does not cause the TB disease, experts warn that those infected with the bacteria run the greater risk of developing the disease if they are smokers...the person who smokes has greater affinity to develop active TB disease, since smoking is a very important predisposition factor to the disease
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)