Addiction

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Harassing Smokers, Part 2: This One Touched a Real Nerve

By Scott Mowbray

Last week, as we kicked off our new How to Quit Smoking section on Health.com, I asked this question: Is It OK to Harass the Smokers We Love? The response was overwhelming—from smokers, former smokers, nonsmokers, children of smokers, parents of smokers, educators, and hospital workers.

Now the word “harass” raised a lot of hackles (I intended it to). Sarcasm was a common response, as from reader MAS: “Sure, harass away! Next we’ll turn the kiddies loose on the oldies, fatties, drunks, and anyone else who might ultimately become burdensome to society.”

JF wrote: “The problem with allowing kids to harass the smokers they love is that it gives kids carte blanche to harass everyone who smokes—including strangers and parents’ acquaintances.”

Many smokers said that harassment simply makes them light up, out of annoyance or spite. As Jessica put it, “I was at a party and some random person put up a huge stink about me smoking (outside). She told me secondhand smoke kills and I told her I was counting on it.”

But some ex-smokers said campaigns by children or spouses had been decisive in their quitting.

Awareness of the effects of secondhand smoke (SHS) on children also leads some parents to quit. Good thing: A CDC summary released last week noted that although antismoking legislation covering public places has significantly reduced SHS exposure among adults, “a higher prevalence of SHS exposure was still evident in the groups aged 4-11 years and 12-19 years” from 1999 to 2004. Kids are among the most vulnerable, and many parents smoke where kids breathe.

Some users asked why smoking was singled out—why not obesity, drinking, and other well-known dangers? “So don’t throw stones, dwellers in glass houses,” said one. “Hello, Brave New World,” wrote MAS.

But some of the most thoughtful posts reflected a sense of love, concern, and propriety. Sue wrote of a smoking friend, age 50, whom she gently encourages: “Should we paper his computer with Post-it notes, stage an intervention, email him photos of diseased lungs, shame him into quitting? Our motives are pure, but those actions would surely damage our friendship. He is struggling with his addiction. He doesn’t need us to point out the obvious.”

And Stephen concluded: “I absolutely believe that as humans we have an obligation to the people around us. This includes telling them when they are harming themselves and others such as smoking and other destructive behaviors. I don’t know what works but I know that supportive talking is at least a start.”

Read my first smoking post, Is It OK to Harass the Smokers We Love?

Read 97 Reasons to Quit Smoking. (You can email it to a smoker.)

Read the latest science on quitting.

(PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES)


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Is It OK to Harass the Smokers We Love?

By Scott Mowbray

When I was 11 years old, I drew skulls and warnings on my mother’s cigarettes and then slipped the cigarettes back in the pack. If I was hoping to embarrass her, it worked: She offered them to guests at an afternoon party, and I heard the details. It wasn’t as hilarious as I had imagined, apparently. That was 1971.
Recently I asked a few friends and acquaintances if they had similar stories and received anecdotes dating all the way back to the start of the modern assault on tobacco. One friend’s father, who was a D.C. lawyer representing a tobacco company in the mid-’60s, fired the client after being pestered by a uniquely positioned pressure group: his offspring. Now 81, he emailed to say he recalls that “firing Lorillard as a client was written up…in an article in The Wall Street Journal, ‘Daddy, Why Do You Represent a Cigarette Company?’”
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‘Hazardous Drinking’ More Common Than Thought

(HealthDay News) — Hazardous drinking — drinking more than guidelines recommend — is common and needs to be recognized as a genuine public health problem, Finnish researchers say.
Currently, alcohol-use disorders are divided into two categories: alcohol abuse/harmful use and alcohol dependence. Some experts believe these two categories aren’t sufficient and that hazardous drinking should be […]


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How Many Drinks Are Too Many for Women?

By Ross Weale
The number of women who drink (and push the limits of safe drinking) is on the rise according to this report by NBC’s Amy Robach. On May 30, Health magazine contributor Roshini Raj, MD, talked with Today show host Meredith Vieira about how alcohol effects women and how much they can drink safely.
Read […]


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How Many Drinks Are Too Many for Women?

By Ross Weale

The number of women who drink (and push the limits of safe drinking) is on the rise according to this report by NBC’s Amy Robach. On May 30, Health magazine contributor Roshini Raj, MD, talked with Today show host Meredith Vieira about how alcohol effects women and how much they can drink safely.

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Gene Therapy in Rats Reduces Cocaine Use

(HealthDay News) — Using gene therapy to increase the level of dopamine — a pleasure-related chemical — receptors in rats’ brains reduced their desire for cocaine by 75 percent, U.S. researchers say.
Previous research by the same team at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory, in Upton, N.Y., found that increasing the level […]


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The Soaring Cost of Dental Care Is Nothing to Smile About

Let’s drill down into why it’s so expensive to have a healthy mouthby Amy O’Connor
This is me holding my $1,200 crown (it recently popped out, hence this blog), my husband’s $450 mouth guard, and the retainer I have worn since I was a teenager.
Notice that I am not smiling. We spend far more on dental […]


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Chronic Coughs Need a Doctor’s Attention

(HealthDay News) — If you wake up due to coughing or have a cough that lasts for weeks, you may have a potentially serious problem that requires medical attention.
“Cough is the most common respiratory symptom for which patients seek medical attention,” Dr. Alan B. Goldsobel, chairman of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology’s […]


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‘Easy Does It’ Eases Holiday Stress

(HealthDay News) — It’s supposed to be the happiest time of the year, but don’t tell that to the patients who mob the offices of San Diego cardiologist Dr. Mimi Guarneri between Thanksgiving and New Year’s.
Some complain of what doctors call “holiday heart” — skipped beats, high blood pressure and angina due to stress or […]


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‘Hospitalist’ Physicians Help Shorten Patient Stays

(HealthDay News) — A new breed of medical specialists, called hospitalists, can make a small but significant difference in shortening how long a patient needs to stay in the hospital, a new study shows.
The 2002-2005 study of almost 77,000 hospital stays at 45 centers showed that treatment by a hospitalist, rather than a general internist, […]