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Tuesday,
October 30, 2001
College-age
smokers increasing numbers
By
Christal Stone
Badger Herald
MADISON,
Wis. (U-WIRE) Smoking among college-age people continues
to pay tobacco companies bills. Over the past six years,
smoking rates among 18- to 24-year-olds have increased by
11 percent, from 25 percent to 36 percent.
According
to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than
400,000 people die each year due to tobacco use, making it
the leading preventable cause of death in the United States.
More people die from tobacco-related illnesses than die from
AIDS, alcohol, drug abuse, car accidents, murders, suicides
and fires combined.
Cigarettes
and other tobacco products are implicated in a number of serious
illnesses. Amy Miller, a nurse practitioner at University
of Wisconsin Health Services, said lung cancer, chronic lung
problems, heart disease, heart attacks and strokes are just
a few of these serious conditions. There are also less well-known
consequences.
People
who smoke develop gum disease and tend to end up with false
teeth, Miller stated. Theres also a link
between smoking and infertility, premature menopause, premature
wrinkling of the skin and problems with impotence.
Furthermore,
smoking suppresses the immune system, making individuals more
susceptible to respiratory infections.
Nicotine,
a chemical found in tobacco products, is a highly addictive
drug, making quitting very difficult.
Cigarette
smoke is a highly complicated pharmacological drug, and there
are also other factors associated with quitting from
social factors to emotional factors, said Erik Heiligenstein,
clinical director of psychiatric services at UHS.
Miller
said smokers should not be discouraged if past cessation efforts
have not been successful.
It
takes people multiple times, the average being seven or more
times, before people are successful in quitting, Miller
said. Research shows that nicotine is much more addictive
than heroin.
Another
difficulty involved in college students cessation efforts
is the link between smoking and alcohol consumption.
According
to Heiligenstein, nicotine dependence becomes complicated
because some smokers, especially social smokers, associate
smoking with alcohol, making quitting more difficult. People
are much more likely to lapse when consuming alcohol.
The
more you do, the better chance you have in quitting,
Heiligenstein said. Your success rate goes up the more
interventions that you do versus just quitting.
Even
though smoking cessation is a difficult task, the health benefits,
both short-term and long-term, are immeasurable.
The
most important health change you can make at this point in
your life is not to smoke, UHS clinical services director
Scott Spear said. Wearing seatbelts is very important,
helmets are very important, using condoms is very important,
but your life expectancy is curtailed the most by having a
history of being a smoker.
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