Fight Against Tobacco | |
Six policies(MPOWER) | M is for monitoring tobacco use. |
P is for protecting people by building (1) areas. | |
0 stands for offering services to help people stop smoking. | |
W is for warning people about the dangers of tobacco. | |
E is for enforcing bans on tobacco (2) and other forms of marketing. | |
R is for raising taxes on tobacco. | |
The most effective way | Raising (3) |
Predictions | Deaths caused by tobacco will rise to over (4) by the year 2030. |
The majority of these deaths will take place in (5) countries. |
Fight Against Tobacco | |
Six policies(MPOWER) | M is for monitoring tobacco use. |
P is for protecting people by building (1) areas. | |
0 stands for offering services to help people stop smoking. | |
W is for warning people about the dangers of tobacco. | |
E is for enforcing bans on tobacco (2) and other forms of marketing. | |
R is for raising taxes on tobacco. | |
The most effective way | Raising (3) |
Predictions | Deaths caused by tobacco will rise to over (4) by the year 2030. |
The majority of these deaths will take place in (5) countries. |
The World No Tobacco Day theme for 2003 is tobacco free films tobacco free fashion Action! World No Tobacco Day is celebrated around the world every year on May 31.
This year World No Tobacco Day will focus on the role of the fashion and film world in fostering the worldwide tobacco epidemic and urge them to stop being used as vehicles of death and disease. The world of film and fashion cannot be accused of causing cancer. But they do not have to promote a product that does.
WHO is calling on the entertainment industry, in particular the world of films and fashion, to stop promoting a product that kills a regular user every second. In November 2002, WHO was joined by medical associations and the Smoke Free Films project at the University of California in San Francisco in its call to the entertainment and fashion industries to ensure that their social responsibility is commensurate with their global influence. In particular, Bollywood and Hollywood—th
The World No Tobacco Day theme for 2003 is Tobacco Free Films Tobacco Free Fashion Action! World No Tobacco Day is celebrated around the world every year on May 31. This year World No Tobacco Day will focus on the role of the fashion and film world in fostering the worldwide tobacco epidemic and urge them to stop being used as vehicles of death and disease. The world of film and fashion cannot be accused of causing cancer. But they do not have to promote a product that does.
WHO is calling on the entertainment industry, in particular the world of films and fashion, to stop promo ting a product that kills a regular user every second. In November 2002, WHO was joined by medical associations and the Smoke Free Films project at the University of California in San Francisco in its call to the entertainment and fashion industries to ensure that their social responsibility is commensurate with their global influence Many famous film production companies, such as Bollywoo
Tobacco
You most likely know that tobacco is a plant. It has large leaves that have been smoked in many forms for at least 2 000 years. But do you know that:
Before the twentieth century, not many people died from using tobacco because there wasn’t much tobacco being used. Cigarettes had to be rolled by hand. A person who was really fast could roll about four cigarettes a minute, or around 2 000 a day. In 1884 the cigarette manufacturing machine was invented that could produce 120 000 cigarettes a day. Soon the number being sold rose to one billion a year. As a result of advertising and efficient machines, the tobacco business continued to grow. Today about 840 packs of cigarettes are sold every second in the US. That’s more than one million every hour! Imagine that! Blink you eyes and 840 packs are s01d. Blink again -- another 840 packs! As the number of cigarette sales increased, so did the number of deaths caused by cigarettes. Today one out of ever
A. Persons between 24 and 44 are more likely to smoke.
B. If a woman is rich and well-educated, she may smoke less than poor woman with lower education.
C. Children may smoke if both of their parents smoke.
D. Occupation, education and income have much to do with a person’s smoking habits.
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