Alaska earned an F for its efforts to protect its citizens from secondhand smoke, according to the American Lung Association’s 2009 State of Tobacco Control report. Our state and local lawmakers have the power to change that by enacting comprehensive smoke-free workplace laws and ordinances.
Alaska failing to protect citizens from secondhand smoke
February 8th, 2010December 4th, 2009
Nice to see you posting on this topic, I need to bookmark this site. Keep up the good work.
Mat-Su needs to go smoke-free
November 9th, 2009A Mat-Su Public Health nurse wrote a column in the Frontiersman calling for a smoke-free ordinance in the Valley that would prohibit smoking in all public places, including restaurants and bars. To read the column, visit http://www.frontiersman.com/articles/2009/11/06/opinion/columnists/doc4aefc7fa6e692019132008.txt
Smoking bans lower heart attack rates
October 16th, 2009A report issued Oct. 15 by the Institute of Medicine shows that smoking bans in places like restaurants, bars, offices and other public places reduce the rates of heart attacks and heart disease. The reductions start fairly quickly after the restrictions are in place, according to the report. Visit http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/Script/DisplayPressRelease.php3?Display=1178 to read more.
Seven Alaska communities are now smoke-free
October 15th, 2009Haines voters passed a smoke-free ordinance that prohibits smoking in all public places, INCLUDING RESTAURANTS AND BARS! Unalaska went smoke-free in August, and Anchorage, Juneau, Klawock, Bethel and Sitka have all been smoke-free for a while. If they can do it, why can’t we?
July 22,2009
July 22nd, 2009I grew up in a small home where both my parents smoked. My aunts, uncles and grandmother, who spent lots of time at our house each week, also smoked. My brother and I both suffered frequent bouts of pneumonia and bronchitis-I was hospitalized once with pneumonia and my brother was hospitalized several times for both. I am certain now that secondhand smoke exposure was to blame for both of our chronic illnesses. I can still remember how worried my parents were each time one of us began coughing. They did everything they knew of to keep us healthy. But back then, no one gave a thought to secondhand smoke. They had no idea that they and the other adults in our lives were jeopardizing our health each time they lit up. If they had, I’d like to believe they would have smoked outside.
July 21, 2009
July 21st, 2009I can still picture my Aunt Kay doing water aerobics in the pool in her Florida backyard. She’d do a few leg lifts on her right side, then reach for the Kool Light cigarette burning in the ashtray alongside the pool. She’d take a long, slow drag, set the cigarette back down, and then work the other side. My aunt smoked Kools for more than 20 years–right up until the day she was diagnosed with lung cancer in 1994. She died six months later, just shy of her 52nd birthday. Though the cancer started in her lungs, it soon spread to her spine where it was carried by spinal fluid to her brain. By the time she died, she was paralyzed and blind. She drifted in and out of consiousness during her final weeks of life. She spent her waking moments telling of the dreams that haunted her sleep–dreams of walks that would never be and of the volcanic ash she’d breathed in on her trip to Alaska two years earlier during the eruption of Mt. Spur, ash she was certain caused her cancer. For though she accepted her doctor’s advice and gave up smoking at the time of her diagnosis, she never acknowledged the role her beloved Kools played in ending her life. After all, she rationalized, the cigarettes she smoked were lights–the healthier choice. My Aunt Kay was one of the strongest, most intelligent women I’ve ever known, yet even she had been duped by tobacco marketing. She battled her cancer and the notion that it was preventable until the bitter end.
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July 15th, 2009Welcome to our blog page. Click the comments link below to send us your story and we will post it here.