Crawfordsville Smoke FreeKeep kids from forming tobacco habit
Posted: Wednesday, August 10, 2011 1:15 am | Updated: 10:07 pm, Tue Aug 9, 2011.
The health risks of tobacco are well known, however kids and teens continue to smoke and use chewing tobacco. Many young people pick up these habits every year — in fact, 90 percent of all adult smokers started when they were kids. Each day, more than 3,900 kids become regular smokers according to a study conducted by the American Cancer Society in November 2010.
Giving kids information about the risks of smoking and chewing tobacco, and establishing clear rules and your reasons for them, can help protect them from these unhealthy habits.
You also should know the warning signs of tobacco use and constructive ways to help someone kick the habit.
One of the major problems with smoking and chewing tobacco has to do with the chemical nicotine. Nicotine addiction happens within days of use. In fact, the nicotine in tobacco can be as addictive as cocaine or heroin. Nicotine affects mood as well as the heart, lungs, stomach, and nervous system.
Other health risks include short-term effects of smoking such as coughing and throat irritation. Over time, more serious conditions may develop, including increases in heart rate and blood pressure, bronchitis, and emphysema. Center for Disease Control and Prevention studies indicate that young smokers are more likely to experiment with alcohol and other illegal drugs.
The attraction for kids
Kids might be drawn to smoking and chewing tobacco for any number of reasons — to look cool, act older, win cool merchandise, seem tough or feel independent.
But parents can combat those draws and keep kids from trying — and getting addicted to — tobacco. Establish a good foundation of communication with your kids early on to make it easier to work through tricky issues like tobacco use.
Prevention tips
To help prevent your kids from using tobacco, keep these guidelines in mind provided by www.cdc.gov/tobacco
• Discuss it in a way that doesn’t make kids fear punishment or judgment.
• It’s important to keep talking to kids about the dangers of tobacco use over the years. Even the youngest child can understand that smoking is bad for the body, such as age five or six.
• Ask what kids find appealing — or unappealing — about smoking. Be a patient listener.
• Read, watch TV, and go to the movies with your kids. Compare media images with what happens in reality.
• Encourage kids to get involved in activities that do not allow smoking, such as sports.
• Show that you value your kids’ opinions and ideas.
• Discuss ways to respond to peer pressure to smoke. Your child may feel confident simply saying “no.” But also offer alternative responses such as “It will make my clothes and breath smell bad” or “I hate the way it makes me look.”
• Emphasize what kids do right rather than wrong. Self-confidence is a child’s best protection against peer pressure.
• Encourage kids to walk away from friends who don’t respect their reasons for not smoking.
• Explain how much smoking governs the daily life of kids who start doing it. How do they afford the cigarettes? How do they have money to pay for other things they want? How does it affect their friendships?
• Establish firm rules that exclude smoking and chewing tobacco from your house and explain why: Smokers smell bad, look bad and feel bad, and it’s bad for everyone’s health.
What to watch for
If you smell smoke on your child’s clothing, try not to overreact. Ask about it first — maybe he or she has been hanging around with friends who smoke or just tried one cigarette. Many kids do try a cigarette at one time or another but don’t go on to become regular smokers. Kids will try and cover the smell of smoke by: Chewing gum, using mints and breath spray. Also, kids will increase the use of perfumes and cologne to help mask the smell.
Additional signs of tobacco use include:
• coughing
• throat irritation
• hoarseness
• bad breath
• decreased athletic performance
• greater susceptibility to colds
• stained teeth and clothing (also signs of chewing tobacco use)
• shortness of breath
Getting through to kids
Sometimes even the best foundation isn’t enough to stop kids from experimenting with tobacco. It may be tempting to get angry, but it’s more productive to focus on communicating with your child.
Here are some tips that may help:
• Resist lecturing or turning your advice into a sermon.
• Uncover what appeals to your child about smoking and talk about it honestly.
• Many times, kids aren’t able to appreciate how their current behaviors can affect their future health. So talk about the immediate downsides to smoking: less money to spend on other pursuits, shortness of breath, bad breath, yellow teeth and smelly clothes.
• Stick to the smoking rules you’ve set up. And don’t let a child smoke at home to keep the peace.
• If you hear, “I can quit any time I want,” ask your child to show you by quitting cold turkey for a week.
• Help your child develop a quitting plan and offer information and resources, and reinforce the decision to quit with praise.
• Encourage a meeting with your doctor, who can be supportive and may have treatment plans.
If you smoke
Kids often do what their parents say and what they do. Despite what you might think, most kids say that the adult whom they most want to be like when they grow up is a parent.
If you’re a smoker:
• First, admit to that you made a mistake by starting to smoke and that if you had it to do over again, you’d never start. Share your difficulties in quitting. Ask them for their help in getting you to quit.
• Second, quit. It’s not simple and it may take a few attempts and the extra help of a program or support group. But your kids will be encouraged as they see you overcome your addiction to tobacco.
• Do not leave your tobacco where kids can get to it. Do not share tobacco with your kids!
There’s a great website at www.wediditstory.com — it has real life stories and help with tips on how to quit smoking.
Visit www.cvillesmokefree.org for more information.
Tomado de.http://www.journalreview.com/news/article_eecb7802-c2c6-11e0-aee2-001cc4c03286.html
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