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More Teens Are Saying, 'Have a
Cigar'
New York -
Slowly but surely, American kids have gotten the message that
cigarette smoking is stinky, smelly and a hazard to your health.
Now, if only they would believe the
same about cigars.
While cigarette consumption
declined in the United States by 10 percent from 2000 to 2004, cigar
consumption jumped 28 percent, according to a recent report
published in the American Journal of Public Health.
Other studies have found that teens
who smoke cigars are definitely behind some of that increase. For
instance, a 2004 survey conducted in Cleveland found that 23 percent
of the 4,409 teens polled preferred cigars, compared to 16 percent
choosing cigarettes.
And the increase may not yet have
peaked, said John Banzhaf, executive director of Action on Smoking
and Health, a national legal action anti-smoking organization based
in Washington, D.C.
"Many of the factors that began
leading to the [cigar] increase are still present," Banzhaf said.
They include the perception that cigars look fashionable and the
fact that high-profile politicians and others are seen smoking them
regularly, he said.
"We have Arnold (Schwarzenegger,
California's governor), smoking cigars and occasionally, Bill
Clinton," he said. "More and more women are smoking cigars."
But it's not just politicians and
women who are fueling the image that cigars are hip, said Scott
Goold, director of Tobacco Freedom, an Albuquerque, N.M.-based
group. "Our popular culture is filled with images of cigars," he
said.
Your neighbor passes them out, for
instance, when the family has a new baby. And businessmen smoke them
when they cinch a business deal, he noted.
For cash-strapped teens, finances
may play a role in their tobacco of choice, Banzhaf said. "Many
states raise cigarette taxes but not cigar [taxes]," he said.
There's also the perception that
cigars are just not as dangerous as cigarettes in terms of cancer
risk, a perception Banzhaf and other experts said is incorrect.
While it's difficult to compare
cigarettes and cigars head-to-head in terms of health risk, Banzhaf
said, it's clear both are risky. Cigar smoking is strongly linked to
a host of deadly cancers of the lip, tongue, mouth, throat,
esophagus, larynx and lung. According to data from the U.S. National
Institutes of Health, smoking just one or two cigars a day doubles
the risk for oral and esophageal cancer and increases larynx cancer
risk six-fold.
Risks rise even higher once users
decide to inhale cigar smoke. Compared to nonsmokers, cigar smokers
who inhale deeply face 27 times the risk of oral cancer and 53 times
the risk of cancer of the larynx, according to the NIH report.
So, what works and what doesn't if
you're a parent trying to convince your teen to avoid cigars and
other tobacco?
Dwelling on the long-term risk of
cancer -- that they may come down with lung cancer at 40 -- is not
usually effective, Banzhaf said, because the typical teen thinks of
the 40th birthday as an eternity away.
Teens also have a hard time
personalizing risk. They tend to think they are immune to life's
dangers -- that something bad could happen to the next person, but
not them.
Parents should instead focus on the
reasons kids light up to begin with. "Kids like to start smoking not
so much for the taste but because it is a sign of growing up,"
Banzhaf said. Peer pressure plays a role, too.
"If parents can start to convince
kids that smoking makes you stinky and smelly, not sexy and
sophisticated, that can have a great impact," he said.
Goold
tells parents to maintain an ongoing dialogue with their children,
the same as they would when talking about not taking drugs. Spending
time together as a family, such as eating dinner together, can help
make that conversation flow more naturally, he said.--
HealthDay
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