Cigarette smoking is perhaps the most devastating preventable cause of disease and premature death. Nearly 50 million Americans smoke -- including one in five teenagers -- resulting in nearly 450,000 deaths each year. Smoking is particularly dangerous for teens because their bodies are still developing and changing and the 4,000 chemicals (including 200 known poisons) in cigarette smoke can adversely affect this process. Cigarettes are also highly addictive, but mentally and physically, and can serve as a major gateway to other forms of drug addiction. Adolescent cigarette smokers are 100 times more likely to smoke marijuana and are more likely to use other illicit drugs such as cocaine and heroin in the future. |
What are the risks associated with smoking cigarettes?
The use of tobacco is addictive. Most users develop tolerance for nicotine and need greater amounts to produce a desired effect. Smokers become physically and psychologically dependent and will suffer withdrawal symptoms when use is stopped. Physical withdrawal symptoms include: changes in body temperature, heart rate, digestion, muscle tone, and appetite. Psychological symptoms include: irritability, anxiety, sleep disturbances, nervousness, headaches, fatigue, nausea, and cravings for tobacco that can last days, weeks, months, years, or an entire lifetime. |
| Smoking can cause or further increase stress, nervousness, and agitation rather than calm you down. | Cigarettes are highly addictive. One third of young people who are just "experimenting" end up being addicted by the time they are 20. | Did you know that second-hand smoke is responsible fore approximately 3,000 lung cancer deaths annually of non-smokers in the United States? |
Quick Facts
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If you or someone you know is smoking, there is help available. There are programs available to you that will help you to quit.
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