Smoking and Women
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The prevalence of smoking among women is like an iceberg. The women do not live for her but nature has endowed them capacity to give birth too. This small indication is enough to focus on the gigantic iceberg, which is less visible than actual size. At present, an estimated 25% of American women smoke. The bad news is that while boys and girls are equally likely to start smoking, the health implications for girls and women are worse. Symptoms of addiction can appear in young people within days or weeks after smoking first begins, well before daily smoking has started. The Surgeon Generals 2001 Report on Women and Smoking concludes that young women ages 18 to 24 were more likely than young men to report that they experienced symptoms of nicotine dependence. The introduction of “womens cigarettes” in the late 1960s and early 1970s coincided with sharp increases in the number of girls aged 12-17 who began smoking, according to the Surgeon Generals report. Virginia Slims successfully capitalized on the burgeoning womens movement with its slogan “Youve come a long way, baby.” Between 1967 and 1973, smoking rates more than doubled among 12-year-old girls.
Cigarette marketers target girls in several ways. In addition to depicting women smokers as beautiful, independent and fun, cigarette advertisements continue to send the subliminal message that smoking helps a girl keep her weight down. Marketing cigarettes as “slims” or “thins” subtly reminds girls and women that smoking will help control weight. One study found that girls who dieted more than once per week were four times as likely to become smokers.
Consequences
Sadly, many women continue to smoke during pregnancy, despite known, widely publicized hazards to both the smoker and the fetus. The carbon monoxide from tobacco use can reduce the amount of oxygen for the developing fetus and nicotine can reduce blood flow to the uterus. Pregnant women who smoke are more likely to experience life-threatening complications of pregnancy, such as premature labor. The Surgeon Generals Report on Women and Smoking concludes that 10% of all infant deaths during pregnancy are linked to smoking. Pregnant women who smoke also increase the risk to their fetus for stillbirth, low birth weight, premature birth, and sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).
Smoking has serious consequences over smokers own health. It increases risks of respiratory diseases. Smoking is the most important cause of chronic bronchitis in the United States. The magnitude of the effect of cigarette smoking far outweighed all other factors leading to lung cancer. There has been a steep rise in death rate due to chronic obstructive lung diseases directly linked to smoking. Other factors such as occupational exposures, genetic factors, and air pollution levels ,have been linked to development of obstructive airway disease, but cigarette smoking is a far more prevalent and important cause of respiratory disease and is, notably, a modifiable risk factor.
In the United States, 43% of children between 2 months to 11 years of age live in a home with at least one smoker. Consequently 91% of children have detectable levels of cotinine, a metabolite of nicotine, commonly used a s a marker of smoke exposure. A number of studies have shown that fetus exposure