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Risks Associated with Smoking Cigarettes with Low Machine-Measured Yields of Tar and Nicotine - Smoking and Tobacco Control Monograph No. 13 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R560
Discovery Miles 5 600
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Risks Associated with Smoking Cigarettes with Low Machine-Measured Yields of Tar and Nicotine - Smoking and Tobacco Control Monograph No. 13 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R560
Discovery Miles 5 600
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This monograph, Risks Associated with Smoking Cigarettes with Low
Machine-Measured Yields of Tar and Nicotine, is the 13th report
published in the National Cancer Institute's (NCI) Smoking and
Tobacco Control Program Monograph Series. One feature of this
monograph is that it blends the old with the new. Monograph 7, The
FTC Cigarette Test Method for Determining Tar, Nicotine, and Carbon
Monoxide Yields of U.S. Cigarettes, covered the history of that
protocol and recommended changes in its procedures. Chapter 2 of
this publication cites this earlier monograph, brings us up to date
on the FTC method, and provides additional suggestions as to what
can be done to help alert the public to the dangers of smoking. The
examination of the scientific literature on low-tar and
low-nicotine cigarettes is not unique to this monograph. Several of
the earlier volumes devoted one or more chapters to discussions of
the various health aspects of tar and nicotine levels. However,
this monograph includes more than just the study of amounts of tar
and nicotine. Chapter 5 includes a discussion on the continued
health risks to smokers, even those who smoke a
low-tar/low-nicotine cigarette, while Chapter 2 describes how
changes in the cigarette design affect an individual's smoking
habit. Chapter 7 points out how the tobacco companies'
advertisements have changed to match the emerging public preference
for low-tar/low-nicotine cigarettes. This monograph is unique in
another important aspect. For the first time, the authors who
prepared the various chapters have had extensive access to the
information gleaned from the internal documents of the tobacco
companies. The tobacco industry files now open to the public and
available on the Internet constitute some 33 million pages of
formal and informal memos, meeting notes, research papers, and
similar corporate documents. Included are marketing strategies that
express the growing concern among the various tobacco companies of
the potential loss of new recruits. This concern over the potential
loss of market was due to the evolving public opinion that smoking
is harmful to health and that it is related to many of the
illnesses that smokers experience over the course of their lives.
The singular message that has been delivered to the public-smoking
causes cancer-is gradually being accepted by more and more people
of all ages.
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