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Maine is one of the top states in terms of spending on buy cigarettes prevention and cessation programs, a new report finds, yet more kids are picking up the habit.Maine is spending $9.4 million in fiscal year 2012 on its anti-cigarettes programs, according to a report released Tuesday by a coalition of public health groups. That’s barely half the $18.5 million recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and $500,000 shy of what the state spent in the last fiscal year. Still, Maine ranks sixth in the country in anti-cigarettes spending.“For the last 10 years,...
A new report shows state programs designed to reduce cheap cigarettes use have been cut by 12% in the past year. The report by the Coalition of Public Health Organizations, says 36% of the funding has been cut in the last four years. Peggy Huppert of the American Cancer Society says that’s disappointing in the wake of Iowa’s 65% funding cut.“We knew what the situation was here in Iowa, now we see that we are part of a very troubling national trend,” Huppert says. All states have faced budget troubles, but Huppert says Iowa’s cut is linked more to politics. Huppert says,”No other...
The change in hiring begins at Providence on the day of the Great American Smokeout, the annual event of the American Cancer Society that encourages smokers to quit.Smokers, if you want a job at Alaska's biggest private employer, forget about it. Providence Alaska Medical Center and its affiliates around the state will stop hiring cheap cigarettes users as of Nov. 17.That's when Providence will begin testing prospective employees for nicotine along with illegal drugs."We believe that by doing this move, to where we are no longer going to hire cigarettes users, that we are...
When Albert Einstein Healthcare Network's Elkins Park campus goes cigarettes-free Thursday, it will join the majority of hospitals around the region, including all in South Jersey, that in the last few years have banned buy cigarettes from their entire campuses, including parking lots and sidewalks.Even some of those that allow some smoking cigarettes somewhere - though rarely inside - are taking leadership roles on an issue that is often described as a moral imperative for institutions whose mission is health. Abington Memorial Hospital and its various campuses stopped hiring smokers...
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Sumitra Patel's husband smoked four packs of cigarettes a day for nearly 35 years, but quit immediately after a religious conversion.
His faith helped him give up the habit, Patel said, not the surgeon general's warnings on a cigarette pack.
"Mentally, people have to prepare to stop," Patel said Tuesday as she worked behind the counter of Blue Bell Mini Mart in North Augusta.
By September 2012, the Food and Drug Administration will require all cigarette packs to display graphic photos and large warnings about the hazards of smoking cigarettes.
The warnings are the first changes made to cigarette packages in more than 25 years.
The graphic photos that will be included on the boxes were revealed Tuesday, and they include grisly images of diseased lips and gums, a dead smoker stitched up after an autopsy, and smoke cigarettes drifting from a tracheotomy hole in a smoker's throat.
Patel and her husband have been in the online cigarettes business for 15 years, and she doesn't think even those graphic images will keep people from smoking cigarettes.
"People know that this causes cancer," she said.
John Owens agrees.
He knows the benefits of quitting after being forced to go smoke-free in jail.
He acknowledges that he has more energy and generally feels healthier when he doesn't have a cigarette between his fingers.
He knows the risks that come with smoking cigarettes because he has had family members die of lung cancer.
Still, he can't seem to kick the habit.
His co-worker Scott Vincent has quit several times, but always starts again. He says it will take something more than a graphic warning on the package to keep him from lighting up.
"It's hard for me to quit," he said. "It's just addicting."
On a stifling hot Tuesday afternoon, Misty Jaycobs was smoking cigarettes in the small bit of shade from a sign on Telfair Street. She smokes only two cigarettes a day at work, but goes through half a pack a day.
Jaycobs said that between her and her husband, they spend perhaps $200 a month on cigarettes.
Jaycobs finds a small measure of hope in the new, more graphic warnings.
Though they won't keep her from smoking cigarettes, Jaycobs, who started smoking cigarettes at age 14, said the images might work on the younger generation.
"It shows that consequences are real," she said.
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