Quantitative Study of Tobacco Facts Designed to Inform Youth Tobacco Prevention Messaging
Attachment E6: AI/AN Cigarette and E-Cigarette Facts
Cigarettes
Addiction:
People who start smoking as teens are more likely to get addicted to nicotine and become lifelong smokers.
Teens' brains are still developing, which can make it easier for them to get addicted to nicotine.
Health Effects:
Smoking can harm nearly every part of your body.
From cigarettes, cigarillos, and little cigars, to chew, dip and hookah, there’s no such thing as safe tobacco.
All tobacco products, including cigarettes, cigarillos, little cigars, chew, dip and hookah, can lead to nicotine addiction.
All tobacco products, including cigarettes, cigarillos, little cigars, chew, dip, and hookah, contain toxic, cancer-causing chemicals that can cause serious health problems.
Teens who smoke may develop smaller, weaker lungs that never grow to their potential size and never perform at maximum capacity.
HPHCs:
Acrolein is a chemical found in cigarette smoke and it can cause irreversible lung damage.
Ammonia is a chemical found in household cleaning products and cigarette smoke.
Benzene is a chemical found in crude oil, gasoline, diesel exhaust, and cigarette smoke.
Beryllium is a chemical found in chemical weapons, reactors, and cigarette smoke.
Butane is a chemical found in fuel gas and cigarette smoke.
Cadmium is a chemical found in batteries and cigarette smoke.
Carbon monoxide is a chemical that is found in cigarette smoke and car exhaust.
Formaldehyde is a chemical used to embalm dead bodies. It is also found in cigarette smoke.
Hydrogen cyanide is a chemical used in rat poison, insecticide, and chemical weapons. It is also found in cigarette smoke.
Lead is a chemical that was once used in paint. It is also found in cigarette smoke.
Toluene is a chemical found in paint thinner and cigarette smoke.
Mortality:
Smokers are estimated to lose at least 10 years of life.
Social Norms and Myths:
If a teen smokes, it is more likely that their younger siblings will smoke too.
Environmental Impact:
Harmful chemicals that hurt human health, wildlife, and water supplies are released from cigar/cigarette butt waste into the environment.
Cigar/cigarette butts and packaging contribute to the millions of tons of litter and trash heaps across America.
E-cigarettes
HPHCs:
Vapes can deliver toxic metal particles, like nickel, lead, and chromium into your lungs
Vapes contain toxic chemicals, even when they do not contain nicotine.
Teens who use vape may be exposed to toxic chemicals such as:
acrylonitrile
acrolein
propylene oxide
acrylamide
crotonaldehyde
Vaping can expose you to similar amounts of nicotine as traditional cigarettes.
Vapes produce more than just water vapor.
Some of the chemicals found in cigarette smoke like formaldehyde and acrolein are also found in some e-cigarette aerosols. Inhaling these chemicals can cause irreversible lung damage.
Health Effects:
Vaping may be harmful to your lungs.
Vapes haven't been fully studied, so the potential health risks to users are unknown.
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