Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Smoking- First draft


Abdulmohsen Alkahtani

 

Smoking

            In this century, many people smoke different kinds of tobacco such as cigarettes and hookah. And also, there are many companies which produce different kinds of tobacco, and these kinds of companies make a lot of money which is approximately equal to the income of some countries. Yet, the problem is there are many young people who smoke a lot which could cause a big problem for their health, society, or economy. There are a lot of questions, but the most important questions are: What are the major causes and effects of smoking, and what are the possible ways of quitting smoking. While there are some people who think that smokers cannot quit smoking, there are several ways to quit smoking.

Reasons People Smoke:

            Smoking tobacco has an old history. According to Pampel (2004) tobacco was discovered before 5000 years ago, and it was used for medical purpose and religious properties; after that young people have used tobacco feel relaxed and fun; then it spread widely in the world. Also, smoking has been debated during the past years by society. During the seventeenth century, religious leaders and statesmen in many countries condemned the use of tobacco. Smokers were excommunicated by the church, and some of them were condemned to death and executed. This history is providing that those leaders had known the danger of smoking on people and they tried to protect people from dangers of smoking.

The world Health Organization and all medical organizations 2010 emphasized that smoking is the biggest risk facing humanity today. “Estimates of the number of yearly deaths from smoking – related causes exceed 400,000 (about one-sixth of all deaths), and smokers can expect to die 13-14 years earlier than nonsmokers. The situation has improved since the famous 1964 report of the surgeon general on the harm of cigarettes, but it remains serious. Despite falling cigarette use in past decades, 23 percent of the U.S. population in the year 2000 smoked, and another 22 percent used to smoke –making nearly half the population vulnerable to the risks of early death. Worse, young people today continue to adopt the habit at about the same rate as 10 years ago” (Pampel, 2010, 3).  These numbers show us the real danger of smoking and how smoking kills more than what wars kill, but the most important question here is how we can help smokers to quit smoking.

            Smoking behavior is learning behavior which means it is not a genetic thing, but it comes by learning other habits. For example, “George attends a party and meets this lovely young thing who is wearing a certain distinctive perfume. They have a very pleasant time at the party and warm feelings are aroused. A few weeks later, George walks into the library at school and smells that perfume. He finds himself experiencing some very pleasant feeling and looking around to see if the young woman is there. Up to the time he went to the party, the perfume would have been just a pleasant aroma, or, conceivably, he wouldn’t have even liked it. Now he feels good when he smells it” (Kish, 1988, 8). If we look carefully to this example we will find that learning how to smoke starts when you spend a lot of time with other smokers, who just smoke while you have a pleasant time with them. So, here is the beginning of learning how to smoke tobacco. According to Kish (1988), there are three possible ways to learn smoking (8-15):

       I.            Associative learning: which is you associate events that occur close together in time and respond to them in a similar way;

    II.            Instrumental learning: this is that kind of behavior which functions to get a payoff for the person; and

 III.            Modeling learning: this way define learning behavior by observe others.

In the first way, a lot of ads on TV try to associate a positive feeling while watching one of their products. “A few years back, there was an ad on TV showing a beautiful, slim, tanned young woman in a snow-white bikini who undulated toward the camera and started drinking a cold can of Sprite. The idea was to have you associate the positive feeling which you had toward the girl with Sprite so that when your eyes fell upon the cans of Sprite at the supermarket, you would experience some of these warm feeling” (Kish, 1988, 8). The second way focuses on how learned behavior pays off. For example, when you have headache you learn take an aspirin which is the behavior; so your headache will be relieved, which is the payoff. In this example, people learn how to smoke as behavior of getting upset, so coming down after they smoke becomes as pay off of this behavior. The third way is how young people learn to smoke from older people. For example, boys observe their parents who are smokers, so these boys will learn how to smoke automatically from their parents.

Effects of smoking:

Smoking causes a lot of effects on people health such as their body system, respiratory system, and also passive smoker who are nonsmoker people. Many studies point out that there are a lot of dangerous problems which can smoke cause especially on respiratory system. “The acute effects of cigarette smoke upon the respiratory tract include: (1) a depression of function in the ciliae lining the airway; (2) a stimulation of mucus production by the goblet cells of the bronchial lining; (3) a varying amount of bronchospasm. Chronic exposure may cause chronic bronchitis, emphysema and various forms of lung cancer” (Shephard, 1982, 73). And also, there are many symptoms of health effects on the respiratory system, especially upon children such as “wheezing, coughing, and sputum production, are increased in children of smoking parents” (National Research Council, 1986, 9). Beside that smoking can cause lung cancer for nonsmoking people and this is what some studies found out, “among studies of various populations in Europe, Asia, and North America, the risk of lung cancer is roughly 30% higher for nonsmoking spouses of smoker than it is for nonsmoking spouses of nonsmokers” (National Research Council, 1986, 10).

 Smokers should notice that smoking not only causes problems in respiratory system, but also causes some damage in their body system. There are some serious effects on smoker’s body. One of these effects is “every exposure to tobacco, from occasional smoking or secondhand smoke, can damage DNA in ways that lead to cancer” (Szabo, 2011, 15B). In this effect we can see clearly the biggest problem which smoking can do for smokers. In addition to that, smoking can cause the most dangerous health effect which is heart attack. And also, smoking can make negative effects on women especially pregnant women. According to Stratton (2001), there is health effect of smoking on pregnant women especially in rate of birth which means the rate of birth will go down if pregnant women have exposure to any kind of tobacco during the pregnancy period.

Now there is an important question someone might ask: are there any health effects for secondhand smoke? The answer is yes; there are many health effects can smoke cause upon passive smoking people such as heart attack and lung cancer. “Under conditions of poor ventilation, non-smokers could inhale the equivalent of the smoking of four cigarettes over the course of a single hour; on this basis, benzpyrene from regular and heavy passive exposure would cause two cases of lung cancer per year in a group of 100,000 non-smokers” (Shephard, 1982, 95). Moreover, smoking can make children at risk from passive exposure to cigarette smoke. According to Shephard (1982), children are attacked from both air pollutants and respiratory pathogens due to a high respiratory minute volume of body mass; and infants probably have no chance to move away from a chain-smoking mother.

In conclusion, Smoking is not a good thing for our community, especially when we know all of the serious effects of smoking. As well we already know the causes of smoking which can help us to find a way to protect the next generation from fall into this terrible disease. Moreover, quitting smoking is not too tough for smokers, who have willpower, to quit smoking by following the proper program for them to quit smoking. Smokers will find themselves having a healthy life just as normal people if they quit smoking soon. Of course, causes of smoking might be different from person to another, but we can work to support smokers to quit by following ways of quit smoking. Last but not least, we should know that prevention is better than treatment.

 

 

 

 

 

 

References

 

            Kish, G. (1988). Quit smoking painlessly. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, Inc.

            National Research Council. (1986). Environmental tobacco smoke: Measuring exposures and assessing health effects. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.

            Pampel, F. (2004). Tobacco industry and smoking. New York, NY: Facts on File, Inc.

            Shephard, R. (1982). The risks of passive smoking. Manuka, Australia: Croom Helm Ltd.

Stratton, K, (2001 ) Clearing the Smoke: Assessing the Science Base for Tobacco Harm Reduction. Washington, D.C; National Academies Press, 2001.

Szabo, L (2010) Report: Just one cigarette is bad. The Miami times, 88 (17), 15

 

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