Helping Families
Find More...
Related Articles
Friendship Problem
Today's Resources:
** Best Help Available for Parents at Low Cost
2) Parenting Secrets by Mother of Five - Popular Ebook
3) How Do I Tell Kids About The Divorce?
4) Attention Deficit Disorder A To Z
Unlike other drugs, smoking involves the participation of non-smokers. For example, if someone is drinking, any other person does not care. But if they are smoking, all have to breathe it. And non-smokers very much don't want to be part of someone else's addiction.
When a smoker smokes, the smoke fills the place. Everyone has to breathe it. And to a non-smoker, it stinks. The smell of smoke goes everywhere and gets into everything. Even after the smoker leaves, his smell are still there. It also gets into clothes and hair. If a non-smoker is in a room with smokers, he has to go home and change clothes and take a bath to get rid of the smell.
Non-smokers don't like being around smokers. A smoker is not just a person who smokes some cigarettes. Smoking is a lifestyle. And it is very different than that of a non-smoker.
Smokers will tend to hang with smokers and avoid non-smokers. They tend to go places and do things where they can smoke and avoid going places and doing things where they can't smoke.
People who don't smoke suffer the effects of passive smoking by breathing in second-hand smoke from smokers' cigarettes. There may still be smoke particles in the air even if it doesn't seem smoky. One of the dangers of passive smoking is that particles from smoke in the air are smaller than in smoke drawn directly from a cigarette and can penetrate deeper into the lungs. The effects of passive smoking include:
*Eye irritation
*Headache
*Cough
*Sore throat
*Dizziness
*Nausea
A non-smoker who lives with a smoker may be exposed to about 1% of their tobacco smoke from passive smoking. This passive smoking can increase the chances of developing lung cancer in non-smokers. Non-smokers, who are exposed to passive smoking in the home, have a 25% increased risk of these diseases.
Passive smoking can be cause of lung cancer and ischaemic heart disease in adult non-smokers, and a cause of respiratory disease, cot death, middle ear disease and asthmatic attacks in children and teens. There is also some evidence to suggest that passive smoking may affect children's mental development.
The same applies to people who work in a smoky atmosphere. All about country a ban on smoking in enclosed public places such as workplaces, pubs and restaurants.
** Best Help Available for Parents at Low Cost
2) Parenting Secrets by Mother of Five - Popular Ebook
3) How Do I Tell Kids About The Divorce?
4) Attention Deficit Disorder A To Z
Unlike other drugs, smoking involves the participation of non-smokers. For example, if someone is drinking, any other person does not care. But if they are smoking, all have to breathe it. And non-smokers very much don't want to be part of someone else's addiction.
When a smoker smokes, the smoke fills the place. Everyone has to breathe it. And to a non-smoker, it stinks. The smell of smoke goes everywhere and gets into everything. Even after the smoker leaves, his smell are still there. It also gets into clothes and hair. If a non-smoker is in a room with smokers, he has to go home and change clothes and take a bath to get rid of the smell.
Non-smokers don't like being around smokers. A smoker is not just a person who smokes some cigarettes. Smoking is a lifestyle. And it is very different than that of a non-smoker.
Smokers will tend to hang with smokers and avoid non-smokers. They tend to go places and do things where they can smoke and avoid going places and doing things where they can't smoke.
People who don't smoke suffer the effects of passive smoking by breathing in second-hand smoke from smokers' cigarettes. There may still be smoke particles in the air even if it doesn't seem smoky. One of the dangers of passive smoking is that particles from smoke in the air are smaller than in smoke drawn directly from a cigarette and can penetrate deeper into the lungs. The effects of passive smoking include:
*Eye irritation
*Headache
*Cough
*Sore throat
*Dizziness
*Nausea
A non-smoker who lives with a smoker may be exposed to about 1% of their tobacco smoke from passive smoking. This passive smoking can increase the chances of developing lung cancer in non-smokers. Non-smokers, who are exposed to passive smoking in the home, have a 25% increased risk of these diseases.
Passive smoking can be cause of lung cancer and ischaemic heart disease in adult non-smokers, and a cause of respiratory disease, cot death, middle ear disease and asthmatic attacks in children and teens. There is also some evidence to suggest that passive smoking may affect children's mental development.
The same applies to people who work in a smoky atmosphere. All about country a ban on smoking in enclosed public places such as workplaces, pubs and restaurants.




