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Text 1. Smoking

Smoking

     Warming-up.

Does smoking make you look cool? Why or why not?

How many friends do you have who smoke? Do you smoke?

Should people be allowed to smoke in public? If so, where?

Is raising the price on cigarettes a good way to get people to quit?

What do you think about electric cigarettes?

What are some bad things about smoking?

Are there any benefits of smoking?

Should smoking cigarettes be illegal?

How popular is smoking in your country?

Should smoking be banned in movies? Why or why not?

 

     Read the following text.  Why is smoking a global problem? What threats it might lead to in the near future?

     Make sure you understand the meaning of the following words and word-combinations:

preventable deaths

annually

approximately

to target young people

public health warnings

secondhand smoke

the harmful effects of smoking

sudden infant death syndrom

increased consumption of tobacco products

to be vulnerable to secondhand smoke

a smoking-related disease

 

Smoking

Smoking is the leading cause of preventable deaths in the world. Tobacco use causes more than 5 million deaths per year worldwide. Current trends show that tobacco use will cause more than 8 million deaths annually by 2030. Although smoking rates are decreasing in developed nations such as the United States and United Kingdom, the number of smokers is slowly increasing in the developing world by approximately 3.4 percent each year.

Smoking harms almost every organ of the body. Globally, smoking related-diseases kills 1 in 10 adults. Smoking related diseases include cancer, heart disease, and lung diseases such as emphysema, bronchitis, and chronic airway obstruction. For every person who dies from a smoking-related disease, 20 more people suffer with at least one serious illness from smoking. Cigarette smoking increases the length of time that people live with a disability by about 2 years. On average, smokers die 13 to 14 years earlier than nonsmokers.

As smoking becomes less acceptable and profitable in the developed world, tobacco companies are expanding into countries with fewer restrictions and public health warnings. Current statistics show that 84 percent of smokers live in developing countries. According to the Gates Foundation, the poorest households in Bangladesh spend almost 10 times as much on tobacco as they do on education.

The global smoking problem also affects children. Between 80,000 and 100,000 children worldwide start smoking every day—roughly half of whom live in Asia. Fifty percent of children who begin smoking in adolescent years continue to smoke for an average of 15 to 20 years. It is predicted that about a quarter of the youth in the Western Pacific Region will die from smoking related-diseases. Studies show that tobacco advertising heavily influences these teenagers. Tobacco promotions are glamorous in ads and films and are suspected to target young people.

Tobacco companies produce approximately 5.6 trillion cigarettes each year. That is equal to nearly 900 cigarettes for every man, woman and child in the world.

Anyone who smokes is at risk for smoking-related diseases. However, you do not need to be a smoker to be at risk. Secondhand smoke causes disease and premature death in nonsmokers, including children. Secondhand smoke is the combination of smoke that comes from the burning end of a cigarette and the smoke exhaled by the smoker. People are vulnerable to secondhand smoke in homes, cars and public places such as bars and restaurants. At least 250 of the 4,000 plus chemicals identified in secondhand tobacco smoke are known to be harmful and 50 are known to cause cancer. The negative health effects of exposure to secondhand smoke include lung cancer, nasal sinus cancer, respiratory tract infections and heart disease. With immediate harmful effects on an individual's heart and blood vessels, secondhand smoke increases the risk of heart disease by approximately 25 to 30 percent. Exposing children to secondhand smoke increases their risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), ear infections, colds, pneumonia, bronchitis and severe asthma; it also slows the growth of a child's lungs.

People who live in countries with unchecked advertising markets, often the case in developing countries, are at higher risk for exposure to tobacco promotion ads. A direct correlation between tobacco advertising and increased consumption of tobacco products has been drawn in several studies. For this reason, tobacco companies spend billions of dollars each year in unchecked markets where bans on tobacco advertising are less likely to get in the way of acquiring new customers.

Smoking is a risk factor for six of the eight leading causes of deaths worldwide. Millions of people are dying every year as a result of the tobacco epidemic. Tobacco companies continue to promote their products in nations where people are not as well educated on the harmful effects of smoking.

Questions to discuss:

  1. How many deaths per year does tobacco use cause worldwide?
  2. What are the consequences of smoking for people?
  3. What are the current statistics of smokers living in developing countries?
  4. How many children and young people start smoking every day?
  5. What are the reasons for teenagers to start smoking?
  6. What are the main risks of secondhand smoking?
  7. What is the correlation between tobacco advertising and increased consumption of tobacco products?
  8. What measures can be taken to decrease the number of smokers over the world?

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