Post on 18-Nov-2014
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A. Winston
B. Newport
C. Camel
D. Marlboro
Marlboro
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/18/camel-cigarettes-menthol-teens_n_1527372.html
A. $25.7 million
B. $500,000
C. $2 million
D. $3 billion
$25.7 million
• Source: Campaign Tobacco Free Kids, 2012 , The Toll of Tobacco in North Dakota
A. One
B. Six
C. Three
D. One Pack (20)
One
Source: The Health Consequences of Smoking: Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease. US
Department of Health and Human Services, 1984.
A. Breast
B. Colon
C. Skin
D. Lung
Lung
Source: CDC Annual smoking-attributable mortality, years of potential life lost, and
economic costs, United States, 1995-1999
Lung cancer caused an estimated 65,700 female deaths in 2002, compared with 39,600 estimated female deaths caused by breast cancer. Kim died at age 44.
A. Nicotine
B. Carbon Monoxide
C. Tar
D. Carcinogens
Carbon Monoxide
Source: http://www.carbonmonoxidekills.com/carbon_monoxide_in_cigarettes.htm
A. 100
B. 69
C. 38
D. 15
• 69
• Source: www.cancer.org/docroot/PED/content/PED_10_2x_cigarette_smoking.asp?sitearea=PED
A. 80%
B. 70%
C. 50%
D. 30%
80%
Source: Calculated from the 2003 National Survey on Drug Use and Health
A. 45
B. 650
C. 2,000
D. 3,500
3,500
Out of the 3,500
who try their first
cigarette, 1,000
become regular
smokers.
Source: Camp again Tobacco Free Kids http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/research/factsheets/pdf/0001.pdf
A. Benzene
B. Nicotine
C. Acetone
D. Cadmium
• Nicotine
• Source: Nicotine Addiction. A report of the Surgeon General. US DHHS, 1988
A. More
B. Less
C. Same
• More
Holding an average-size dip in your mouth for 30 minutes gives you as much nicotine as smoking three cigarettes.
• Source:http://www.nidcr.nih.gov/HealthInformation/DiseasesAndConditions/SpitTobacco/QuittingGuide/
A. 400,000
B. 125,000
C. 53,000
D. 1,000,000
• 400,000
Minnesota Twins’ Target
Field holds 39,504
people. That’s less
than one tenth of
smoking related deaths.
Source: http://breathend.com/faq/benefits-of-quitting/
That is more than alcohol, illicit drugs, homicide, suicide, car accidents and AIDS
combined.
Source: McGinnis J, FoegeWH. Actual causes of death in United States. Journal of American Medical Association1993;270:2207–2212.
A. 440
B. 700
C. 1100
D. 1600
1100
As many two full large passenger planes
A. 7,000
B. 25,000
C. 50,000
D. 100,000
• 50,000
Source: 53,000Figure determined by: Deaths from 3,000 lung cancer, 35,000 heart disease and 15,000 infant (SIDS, asthma, respiratory disease) deaths from secondhand smoke exposure.
A. $247,000
B. $48 million
C. $247 million
D. $1.8 billion
$247 million
Source: http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/research/factsheets/pdf/0176.pdf
A. 81%
B. 45%
C. 22%
D. 65%
81%
Source: YRBS 2007
About 8 out of every 10 students in North Dakota don’t smoke!
Feeling Overwhelmed?
Contact me. We can help.
Colleen Sweet
Tobacco Prevention Coordinator
csweet@nd.gov
701-368-8774