newsletterlibrary.com

Top : Health : Addictions : Substance Abuse : Tobacco :
Teen Smoking

Categories
Organizations @
Prevention @
Promotion @

Websites
Information resource list.
http://www.schoolfile.com/hctrp2.htm

Just three cigarette brands account for nearly all teen smoking: Marlboro (Philip Morris), Newport (Lorillard), and Camel (RJ Reynolds). These are among the most heavily advertised and promoted cigarette brands, in particular Marlboro, and Marlboro alone accounts for nearly two thirds of teen smoking.
http://monitoringthefuture.org/data/cigbrands.html

Searchable database shows which retailers did and didn't sell tobacco to kids.
http://www.fda.gov/opacom/campai...s/tobacco/compliancechecker.html

Factsheet from ASH-UK covers prevalence, influences, effects, addiction, and prevention.
http://www.ash.org.uk/html/factsheets/html/fact03.html

Thoracic surgeon Fred Grannis MD provides young people and their families with information on cigarette smoking, cessation, lung cancer risk, diagnosis and treatment.
http://www.smokinglungs.com/cyberlib.htm

Longitudinal research finds that kids who reconized tobacco advertising or owned a tobacco promotional item (T-shirt, cap) were more likely to try smoking, when followed up 3 years later.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/htbi...y?db=m&form=6&uid=9480360&Dopt=r

Kansas youth speaking out about big tobacco companies. Join with other teens in Kansas and help create one strong voice working to expose Big Tobacco's lies.
http://www.kstask.org

Facts on tobacco use among children, nicotine and nicotine addiction in children, tobacco-caused disease, questions to ask candidates for public office, children and tobacco advertising.
http://www.smokefreekids.com/kidsfact.htm

Washington Post article describes the approaches of the four major tobacco companies -- Philip Morris, R. J. Reynolds, Brown and Williamson, and Lorillard -- to get younger smokers, and explains why this is so important to the industry.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp...erm/tobacco/stories/slugfest.htm

A place for teens to come to learn more about tobacco and tobacco use prevention and control. Teens can come here to learn more about the perils of smoking, to find out how to quit, to become an activist, or just to see what other teens around North Carolina are doing about tobacco prevention and control.
http://stepupnc.com

Blowing Smoke is an anti-tobacco curriculum designed by kids for kids to expose the exaggerated usage of tobacco in current movies.
http://www.blowingsmoke.arizona.edu

Research reports on tobacco industry and marketing to kids bofore and after the Master Settlement Agreement with the states in November 1998.
http://tobaccofreekids.org/reports/addicting/

Broad summary of issues from the Center for Tobacco-Free Kids.
http://www.acponline.org/journals/news/nov96/handouts.htm

Session from health conference on smoking influences, smokefree programs and policies, and engaging youth in tobacco control activities.
http://apha.confex.com/apha/128am/techprogram/session_3332.htm

Article for teens on smoking and its promotion by the tobacco industry.
http://www.kidshealth.org/teen/drug_alcohol/tobacco/smoking.html

5 papers (abstracts only) from RWJ Foundation sponsored study on youth tobacco practices and attitudes.
http://apha.confex.com/apha/128am/techprogram/session_1594.htm

Tobacco products cause more lung cancer to smokers who start young, recent research finds; scientists think it may relate to the impact of smoking at an age when the lungs are still developing.
http://news6.thdo.bbc.co.uk/hi/e...smoking/newsid_313000/313203.stm

Recent research shows that Philip Morris's "Think, Don't Smoke" ads make kids more likely to smoke, while anti-smoking ads designed by health groups decrease smoking.
http://www.apha.org/news/press/2002/truth.htm

Summary of the science on how people get addicted, what nicotine does in the brain.
http://www.txtwriter.com/Onscience/Articles/addictingkids.html

A unique smoking cessation research project for Alaskan teenagers.
http://www.anhb.org/sub/CTQ/ctqhome.htm

Reports and slide presentations on tobacco industry youth prevention programs, kids and tobacco, and spit tobacco. In Word and PowerPoint format.
http://outreach.missouri.edu/hesfn/cancer/

Consumer Health Interactive article examines the causes of teen smoking, such as tobacco advertising from Lorillard.
http://www.principalhealthnews.com/topic/teensmokers

Scientific paper examines the evidence that lung damage is greater and more lasting the younger a person started smoking.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entr...list_uids=10203280&dopt=Abstract

Report from a symposium held July 1999. Summary of findings, paper presentations, talks; recommendations.
http://www.nzdf.org.nz/Symposium1.html

Time magazine article on bidis.
http://www.time.com/time/magazin...0,9171,1101021216-397513,00.html

What parents can do to prevent teenage smoking plus fact sheets, statistics and health effects.
http://parentingteens.about.com/...ens/library/weekly/aa032801a.htm

36 pages of facts and quotes on the subject.
http://www.globalink.org/tobacco...r15/Chap15_Children_Smoking.html

Research finds that point-of-purchase cigarette ads at convenience stores influence teen smoking.
http://apha.confex.com/apha/128am/techprogram/paper_10287.htm

CNN report on a study that found that young people who experiment with cigarettes can become chemically dependent on tobacco faster than people think.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/09/11/kids.tobacco.addiction/

Trends in teen smoking, campaigns that work, and the industry's counter-attack, from a magazine for nurses.
http://www.advancefornurses.com/...editorial/editorial.aspx?CC=3922

Study presents national estimates of the proportion of yotuhs in each of 7 stages of smoking, and evaluates the effects of pro-smoking and anti-smoking influences.
http://www.ajph.org/cgi/content/abstract/94/2/331

Reports on survey of 3000 students. Topics include peer influence, role of advertising, and lack of government support for an anti-smoking campaign.
http://www.cyberdyaryo.com/features/f2001_0817_04.htm

From Consumer Reports.
http://www.gaspforair.org/gasp/gedc/artcl-new.php?ID=115

Resources from the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/smokingandyouth.html

Anti-smoking group offers youth a tobacco prevention message for grades 6-12, educational videos, quit smoking tips, anti-tobacco motivational speakers, and related resources. Founded by Patrick Reynolds.
http://www.tobaccofree.org/

Factsheet on youth and tobacco from Americans for Nonsmokers' Rights.
http://www.no-smoke.org/learnmore.php?id=202