Tuesday, February 26, 2013

New Oregon law might make cigarettes prescription only

Trying to quit smoking? You might want to move to Oregon. A new bill would classify cigarettes as a Schedule III controlled substance, making them illegal to purchase without a doctor’s prescription. Portland Rep. Mitch Greenlick introduced the bill in the Oregon State Legislature in an attempt to reduce the number of addicted people, but has received criticism from smokers and non-smokers alike who believe the initiative is not feasible. Under Greenlick’s proposal, smokers would be charged with a misdemeanor and face up to one year’s imprisonment and a $6,250 fine for being caught with a cigarette or any of the other Schedule III controlled substances, including ketamine, lysergic acid and anabolic steroids. The bill also prohibits the State Board of Pharmacy from adopting rules that exempt any nicotine products from the legislation, which would include chewing tobacco, nicotine patches and gums, among others. Law enforcement agencies would have the right to inspect all products that they believe might contain nicotine.

New Year anti-smoking campaign highlights cancer risks

The government is looking to capitalise on the British penchant for making health-related New Year resolutions with a hard-hitting £3m ad campaign designed to shock smokers into quitting. The Department of Health's campaign, developed by agency Dare, marks a return to the shock advertising tactics employed eight years ago to directly target smokers. The campaign has been developed on the back of research which shoes that more than a third of smokers still believe that the health risks associated with smoking are "greatly exaggerated". In the campaign, which will run on TV, posters and billboards and online, a cigarette a smoker is inhaling is seen transformed into a cancerous looking growth.

Monday, February 18, 2013

Smoke-Free Policies with No-Effects

The statistics just prove that non-smoking campaigns have not had a greater effect than the growing number of cigarette advertisements put out on television, radio, billboards, in cinemas, magazines and on promotional stands at malls. They are, in fact, much more eye-catching and interesting than the old, stale non-smoking campaigns. Up to now, the government only suggests rather than acts in order to lower the number of smokers.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Tobacco Firms Predict Sharp Increase in Illegal Cigarettes

LONDON – A top cigarette manufacturer has warned that the number of cigarettes purchased in the United Kingdom that avoid duty and taxes is set to soar, The Independent reports.
Japan Tobacco International (JTI) recently conducted an undercover survey around northwest London and found that a large number of counterfeit cigarettes and rolling tobacco were being sold at sharp price discounts.

Washington State Cigarettes Nearly 40% Contraband: Study

A soon-to-be published study by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy in Michigan reveals 36% of all cigarettes consumed in Washington are contraband, KREM.com reports. "The bottom line here is that many governments are making tobacco products as valuable as illicit narcotics," said Mackinac's Michael LaFaive. Contraband cigarettes for Washingtonians are any that do not pay the state’s $3.02 per pack tax. In 2010, Washington State increased its cigarette tax by a dollar a pack to the fourth highest state tax in the nation.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Kicking the habit is Rihanna’s New Year resolution

The singer believes this is the right moment to stop smoking because of the leisure time she’s got to pursue her other interests. The celebrity news portal learns from a source that the singer wants to devote more time to physical activities after quitting, so she does not gain extra weight.

NHS offers new help in quitting smoking

A smoking cessation programme run by Nuneaton-based George Eliot Hospital NHS Trust is going to extend exhaustive help and support to people who want to kick the habit in 2012, reports the Coventry Telegraph. The service has already had its fair share of success over the past year, helping more than 3,700 nicotine addicts give up smoking, the local tabloid informs, adding that it will recommence this month with a renewed impetus on motivating people to quit smoking and lead a healthy, long life.

Monday, February 4, 2013

Buy Smokeless Cigarettes and Eliminate The Dangers Of Tobacco Smoke

What looks like a cigarette, feels like a cigarette, allows one to inhale and exhale like a cigarette but contains no tobacco? Electric cigarettes. This new invention is taking the smoking world by storm and is helping people hopelessly addicted to nicotine to break this dangerous habit. The electric cigarette was invented about a decade ago and now people can buy smokeless cigarettes that allow them to enjoy the smoking experience without much of the dangers of tobacco. When people buy smokeless cigarettes and use them they are breaking no laws and are not endangering the people around them because this relaxing way of smoking does not require any tobacco.