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What do you think of when you look at this picture? (Not including “cigarette” or “smoke”)

Tobacco and Teens. What do you think of when you look at this picture? (Not including “cigarette” or “smoke”). Rocky Horror Tobacco Show. “Rocky Horror Tobacco Show” Watch video Make groups. Rocky Horror Tobacco Show. In your groups… Choose a “KODAK MOMENT”

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What do you think of when you look at this picture? (Not including “cigarette” or “smoke”)

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  1. TobaccoandTeens What do you think of when you look at this picture? (Not including “cigarette” or “smoke”)

  2. Rocky Horror Tobacco Show • “Rocky Horror Tobacco Show” • Watch video • Make groups

  3. Rocky Horror Tobacco Show • In your groups… • Choose a “KODAK MOMENT” • Kodak moments are little snapshots in your brain that come up when you reflect back on what you saw. • Be prepared to explain why you chose this moment as something memorable and share it with the class later.

  4. Rocky Horror Tobacco Show • Write a letter to one of the characters from the video, share with the class. • Characters from “Rocky Horror Tobacco Show” • Debbie, stoma lady • Tom, sad old guy can’t blow out a match • Karl, the big mustache, moody • Joey, spikey hair, cursing a bit • Molly, red hair, small eyebrows • Professor Grosso • Or…any other character that you remember

  5. #1-“When you’re in junior high you start smoking to look like the big kids and fit in. Then when you are older, you are in high school or college, you don’t need to look older or fit in, you are already one of the big kids. By that time you’re screwed, they’ve got you.” • Who are they referring to when they say, “…they’ve got you” • Who said this? • Debbie, stoma lady • Tom, sad old guy can’t blow out a match • Karl, the big mustache, moody • Joey, spikey hair, cursing a bit • Molly, red hair, small eyebrows • Nick, black hair slicked back, curses a few times • Professor Grosso

  6. Who said it??? • Debbie, the stoma lady

  7. #2-“I remember I really liked this guy and he was a smoker and I smoked with him because I liked him so much. Then we broke up but I still have this habit. It’s so sad because nothing ever came out of that guy, but here I still have this habit.” • Why do you think this girl smoked with this boy? • Who said this? • Debbie, stoma lady • Tom, sad old guy can’t blow out a match • Karl, the big mustache, moody • Joey, spikey hair, cursing a bit • Molly, red hair, small eyebrows • Professor Grosso

  8. Who said it??? • Debbie, aka stoma lady • Molly, reddish hair, thin eyebrows

  9. #3-“It makes you sad, that you can’t do the things that you used to do.” • Do you think this character will ever improve his health so he can do the things he used to do? • Who said this? • Debbie, stoma lady • Tom, sad old guy can’t blow out a match • Karl, the big mustache, moody • Joey, spikey hair, cursing a bit • Molly, red hair, small eyebrows • Professor Grosso

  10. Who said it??? • Debbie, aka stoma lady • Molly, reddish hair, thin eyebrows • Tom, sad old guy can’t blow out a match

  11. #4-“Its scary, you get up in the night and you can’t breath, what do you do? The more you react, the less you can do...” • What is worse, the decreased quality of years or the decreased quantity of years from tobacco use? • Who said this? • Debbie, stoma lady • Tom, sad old guy can’t blow out a match • Karl, the big mustache, moody • Joey, spikey hair, cursing a bit • Molly, red hair, small eyebrows • Professor Grosso

  12. Who said it??? • Debbie, aka stoma lady • Molly, reddish hair, thin eyebrows • Tom, sad guy with big glasses, can’t blow out a match • Karl, moody guy with big mustache

  13. #5-“I didn’t know so much tar builds up in your lungs. That’s pretty damn disgusting.” • Do you think seeing this jar of tar will make him want to quit? • Who said this? • Debbie, stoma lady • Tom, sad old guy can’t blow out a match • Karl, the big mustache, moody • Joey, spikey hair, cursing a bit • Molly, red hair, small eyebrows • Professor Grosso

  14. Who said it??? • Debbie, aka stoma lady • Molly, reddish hair, thin eyebrows • Tom, sad guy with big glasses, can’t blow out a match • Karl, moody guy with big mustache • Joey, hair slicked back, curses a few times

  15. Effects of Smoking How does tobacco effect different parts of your body? Why is it so bad for you???

  16. Tobacco Deaths • The adverse health effects from cigarette smoking account for an estimated 443,000 deaths, or nearly one of every five deaths, each year in the United States. • More deaths are caused each year by tobacco use than by all deaths from HIV, illegal drug use, alcohol use, motor vehicle injuries, suicides, and murders combined.

  17. Health Facts for Teens • Girls who smoke are more likely to grow excess facial hair. • Smoking as few as 5 cigarettes a day can reduce teens' lung function growth, with teenage girls being especially vulnerable.

  18. Health Facts for Teens • 40% of teenagers who smoke daily have tried to quit and failed. • About 2/3 of teen smokers say they want to quit smoking, and 70% say they would not have started if they could choose again. • 44% of teens say they didn't know bidi cigarettes could lead to cancer.

  19. Health Facts for Teens Cont. • Teens who smoke produce twice as much phlegm as teens who don't. • Teens who smoke break out more. • Zits last longer for teens who smoke. • Kids who smoke 2 or 3 cigarettes a day can get hooked in as short as two weeks.

  20. Health Facts for Teens Cont. • Teens who smoke are more likely to catch a cold than people who don't - and their symptoms will probably be worse and last longer. • Teenagers who smoke use more medications than those who do not smoke. • Teenagers who smoke have significantly more trouble sleeping than those who do not smoke.

  21. Short-Term Effects • Increase blood pressure • Increase heart rate • Bad breath • Yellow and brown stained teeth and fingers • Smelly clothes, car, furniture and homes.

  22. Long-Term Effects • Heart disease • Emphysema http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fVG3MDm9IaE • Cancer of the mouth, lung, esophagus

  23. Long-Term Effects (continued) • Chronic lung disease (smokers’ lungs turn black as they become clogged with smoke and the debris inhaled with the incinerating tobacco) • Decreased levels of physical activity (due to shortness of breath) and consequently obesity • Miscarriages and small, premature babies who often require respiratory machines to help them breathe

  24. Long-Term Effects (continued) • Impotence • Wrinkled skin • Weakened immune system • Chronic cough

  25. How Smoking Affects Your Body • BRAIN • Pleasure & Then SedationNicotine, the highly addictive chemical in cigarettes and tobacco, stimulates the “pleasure centers” in the brain–creating pleasure and alertness. Nicotine initially stimulates the brain, then acts as a tranquilizer and sedative. • Brain Alteration, withdrawal, and addictionNicotine directly affects, alters, and takes control of specialized receptor cells in the brain responsible for regulating well-being, mood, and memory. The drug remains active 20-40 minutes, then withdrawal symptoms begin. Regular and long-term use leads to addiction.

  26. How Smoking Affects Your Body • HEART • Nicotine raises heart rate, increases blood pressure, and constricts blood vessels. • Carbon monoxide increases risk of heart attack and stroke • Cause weakening of the heart muscle’s ability to pump blood, leading to death • http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=you+tube+tobacco+heart&view=detail&mid=F4B2EA8A236CD22728AEF4B2EA8A236CD22728AE&first=0

  27. How Smoking Affects Your Body • THROAT • Cancer of larynx and esophagus, irritates membranes of the throat. • LIVER • Cirrhosis of the liver

  28. How Smoking Affects Your Body • ADRENAL GLANDS • Stimulates adrenaline • VERTEBRAE • Increased risk of vertebral cancer

  29. REPORDUCTIVE ORGANS • MALE & FEMALEReduces sex drive and increases risk of impotence in males, increased chance of ovarian cancer in females, and brings on menopause earlier. • Risk of cancers in reproductive organs. • PREGNANCY AND UNBORN BABIESSmoking increases chances of complications during pregnancy.Smoking during pregnancy may cause impairment of baby’s growth, intellect, and emotional development. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g89GDULsOQ4

  30. CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM • Heart rate goes up 15-20 beats per minute • Increases blood pressure • Irritates mouth and throat • Major cause of heart attack, lung diseases, stroke, and death

  31. MOUTH • Dulls taste buds, irritates membranes of the mouth, bleeding and receding gums, foul breath, and numbness. • Staining of teeth, tooth decay and tooth loss • Cancer of the mouth

  32. How Smoking Affects Your Body • LUNGS • Asthma • Emphysema • Chronic bronchitis • Lung cancer • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQVh6YhhK20 • Fills your lungs with tar http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HV5FZ35CsIc

  33. STOMACH & DUODENUM • Stomach and duodenal ulcers develop, creating burning pain • KIDNEYS • Reduces kidneys’ ability to process fluids and waste, inhibiting formation of urine • Cancer

  34. How Smoking Affects Your Body • BLOOD VESSELS • Nicotine causes the blood vessels to constrict, increasing blood pressure, and risk of heart attack • BLADDER • Cancer of the bladder • BONES • Increases the risk of early onset of Osteoporosis

  35. Cigarettes • Studies have proven that smoking cigarettes causes cancers of the bladder, oral cavity, pharynx, larynx, esophagus, cervix, kidney, lung, pancreas, and stomach, and causes acute myeloid leukemia. It also causes heart disease and stroke. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KYmOksfu7vs&feature=related

  36. Cigars, Cigarillos and Little Cigars • Studies have shown that cigar smoking is linked to cancers of the mouth, lips, tongue, throat, larynx, lung, pancreas and bladder cancer. Cigar smoking, like cigarette smoking, is also linked to gum disease, where the gums shrink away from the teeth. It also raises your risk that teeth will actually fall out.

  37. Smokeless Tobacco • Smokeless tobacco contains 28 cancer-causing agents (carcinogens). It increases the risk of developing cancer of the oral cavity, is strongly associated with leukoplakia (a lesion of the soft tissue in the mouth that consists of a white patch or plaque that cannot be scraped off) and recession of the gums.

  38. Hookah • Hookah smoking has been associated with lung, mouth and other cancers, heart disease and respiratory infections. • The substances used to heat the tobacco also produce carbon monoxide, heavy metals and cancer causing chemicals, creating it own health hazards. • Sharing the mouthpiece of the Hookah has been associated with mouth and other infections including herpes, tuberculosis and hepatitis.

  39. Electronic cigarette or E- cigarette • Recent studies by the FDA show that the e-cigarette may contain carcinogens. It is often used to help quit using tobacco, but more info is needed to see what the long term issues may be.

  40. Second-Hand Smoke • Secondhand smoke: is a mixture of 2 forms of smoke (sidestream and mainstream) from burning tobacco. • Sidestream smoke: smoke that comes from the end of a lighted cigarette, pipe, or cigar • Mainstream smoke: smoke that is exhaled by a smoker

  41. Second-Hand Smoke • If you are exposed to second-hand smoke, you need to be assertive and proactive for your own health and safety. • If you are with someone who cannot speak up for themselves, you need to speak up for them.

  42. Second-Hand Smoke • Non-smokers who are exposed to secondhand smoke at home or work increase their risk of lung cancer by 20 to 30 percent. • There is NO SAFE LEVEL of exposure to second-hand smoke.

  43. Second-Hand Smoke Video • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sE7B6Z6-rls • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=raYlnhksw5I&feature=related

  44. Strategies for Tobacco Advertising How do they do it? Why do they target teens? How can we fight back?

  45. Does Tobacco Advertising Work? • Who Spends the Most Money on Tobacco Advertising? • Marlboro • Newport • Camel

  46. Does Tobacco Advertising Work? • Brand Preferences of Middle School Students: • 43% preferred Marlboro • 26% preferred Newport • 9% preferred Camel • Brand Preferences of High School Students: • 52% preferred Marlboro • 21% preferred Newport • 13% preferred Camel

  47. By associating celebrities and “ideal” people with fun, excitement and attitude, tobacco advertisers work hard to convince consumers that if they don’t smoke, they’re not cool. (There’s even a brand of cigarette called “Kool”) 1-The Cool Factor

  48. Although tobacco companies can’t use celebrity spokespeople in their ads, researchers have noted an increase in smoking by characters in movies – especially movies with teen appeal. Magazine photos of musicians, models and actors smoking also promote the idea that smoking is glamorous. 2-Celebrity Smokers

  49. Cigarette ads geared to young women play on the idea of being “liberated” and in control – while at the same time playing on insecurities about body image. Brands geared toward women often have words like “slim” or “slender” in the product name. 3-Dreams and Insecurities - Women

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