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Effects of Tobacco Use . Lesson 3. The Georgia Performance Standards for Health Education are content standards and provide an outline for curriculum development. https://www.georgiastandards.org/Standards/Pages/BrowseStandards/HealthEd.aspx.
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Effects of Tobacco Use Lesson 3
The Georgia Performance Standards for Health Education are content standards and provide an outline for curriculum development. • https://www.georgiastandards.org/Standards/Pages/BrowseStandards/HealthEd.aspx
HE H.S.4: Students will demonstrate the ability to use interpersonal communication skills to enhance health and avoid or reduce health risks. • c. Summarize how to ask for and offer assistance to enhance the health of self and others. • HE H.S.5: Students will demonstrate the ability to use decision-making skills to enhance health. • e. Analyze the potential short-term and long-term impact of each decision on self and others.
Is smoking worth the short and long term effects it has on one’s body?
Short Term Effects of Tobacco Use • Ashtray breath • Discolored teeth, fingers, fingernails • Smelly hair and clothes • Cigarettes burns in car, on clothes • Dry skin • Cracked lips, white spots, sores, and bleeding in the mouth (chewing tobacco) • Hacking cough • Build up of phlegm in the lungs and throat • Weakened immune system • Decreased sense of smell and taste • Increased heart rate and blood pressure • Sore throat
Long Terms effects of Tobacco Use • Emphysema: a severe condition which causes a shortness of breath • Addiction • Endurance Loss • Loss of taste and smell • Cancer • Wrinkled skin, stained nails, stained teeth, aged appearance • Bronchitis • Heart disease • Heart Attack • Death
Do you think short or long term effects are worse for the body?
Effects on the Respiratory System • Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)- Disease that results in a gradual loss of lung function, includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. Many with COPD have both chronic bronchitis and emphysema • Chronic bronchitis- Condition where the bronchi are irritated. It results in chronic coughing and excessive mucus secretions. • Emphysema- Condition that destroys the tiny air sacs in the lungs through which O2 is absorbed into the body.
Facts • Smoking causes even more deaths from other respiratory diseases and heart conditions than from cancer. • If current trends continue, scientists estimate that tobacco will kill about one billion people in the twenty-first century.
Cancer • Lung Cancer- the leading cause of cancer deaths for both men and women • 4 out of 5 cancers are caused by smoking. • More than 85% of all lung cancer deaths are caused by smoking. • Only 15% of lung cancer patients survive for more than five years. • Oral Cancer- about 90% of all oral cancers occur in tobacco users • Leukoplakia- result from direct contact with tobacco juices. This is thick, white cancerous spot on the inside of the mouth. *Tobacco users are at risk of cancers of the esophagus, larynx, stomach, pancreas, kidney, bladder and blood.* Smoking is the single biggest cause of cancer in the world!
Cancer • The people with the highest lung cancer risks are those who: • Smoke the most cigarettes per day • Smoke over long periods of time • Cancer risk is the greatest • Start smoking young
Smokeless Tobacco • Smokeless Tobacco contains some of the same chemicals that are in tobacco smoke. • Most tobacco users spit out the excess tobacco juice but some is swallowed. The tar and chemicals get into your digestive tract causing health problems. • Cancer of the mouth, gum, jaw, and tongue.
Smokeless tobacco users experience…. • Gums tend to disappear from around the teeth • Roots of teeth become exposed and most likely will decay • Bad and discolored teeth • Sense of smell and taste is reduced • Lumps in jaw or neck line • Leukoplakia • Bleeding and soreness in the mouth • Difficulty speaking or swallowing
Effects of Smoking • Smoking causes immediate damage to a persons arteries. • Each cigarette that is smoked takes 10 minutes of one’s life. • Smoking is the cause of 1 out of 5 deaths in the U.S. • Children that inhale smoke are more likely to develop asthma. • Smoking one pack of cigarettes a day will cost a person about $2000 a year.
Effects on Nonsmokers • Passive smoke: secondhand smoke lingering in the environment, smoke can be either be from mainstream or sidestream smoke • Mainstream smoke: smoke that smoker blows off • Sidestream smoke: smoke that comes from burning tobacco
Pregnancy and Smoking • Mothers who smoke increase their risks for: • Small fetal growth • Miscarriages • SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome) • Stillbirth • Developmental problems • The mother can pass nicotine to the child through breast milk
How to check heart rate • Use first 2 fingers and press down on your wrist till you feel a heart beat. This is your artery. • There is one in your neck that can be used also. • Two ways to check: • Count for 10 seconds and multiply by 6 • Count for 30 seconds and multiply by 2
Drawing Assignment • Get a packet, a piece of paper, and a pencil. • You are to draw your own person. Be creative with hair, head and body. • Add anything that is related to tobacco products. • This person should advertise the effects that tobacco has on the body. • Follow the example given.
Activity • Determining the effects that smoking has on the respiratory system • Walk for 1 minute • Walk with straw for 1 minute • Run for 1 minute • Run with straw for 1 minute • When using the straw try to close your nose. Air should only be coming out of straw. • After each check heart rate