Tobacco chewers are being encouraged to quit with the help of a new website.
Recently launched site mylastdip.com is aimed at habitual users of smokeless tobacco – one indicated cause of oral cancer conditions such as mouth cancer and throat cancer.
Funded by the National Cancer Institute the website offers an exciting approach to quitting smokeless tobacco use in the hopes of helping to reduce the incidence of oral cancers.
Aimed at the 12 million or so smokeless tobacco users in the US, mylastdip.com is unique in its approach to the problem of this kind of tobacco use, and is one of the few resources out there that speciafically targets young users – with many existing programs catering only to the needs of the older and entrenched smokeless tobacco user.
It is hoped that by targeting use in the younger generation, the scheme will be able to make a positive dent in the future figures for use of chewing tobacco.
The site has two specially tailored progams – one that is aimed at the younger users of chewing tobacco (those aged between 14 and 25) and a second program that is created for the more mature user aged 26 and over.
With free access to the programs, which offer help and support to those who have made the decision to quit smokeless tobacco use, the site hopes to be a tool in the weaponry against the rapidly increasing rate of oral cancer diagnosis in the US.
With mouth and throat cancer detections standing at around 40,000 each year across the country, health campaigners have welcomed this additional ammunition to help arrest the rising oral cancer figures.
Users of the site will be offered online help and advice to assist them in stopping the use of this oral cancer causing substance and will also be able to access internet forums where they can share journey to being free of smokeless tobacco with other site-users.
Smokeless Tobacco Users Urged to Quit to Avoid Oral Cancer
Second Hand Smoke and Cancer
Imagine yourself working in a small town. Your office also doubles as the break room, which means that everyone spends their smoking breaks just a few feet from you. It’s the norm in a little country town, so no one thinks anything of it and simply gossips about the day and local town happenings. But you could be setting yourself up for lung cancer, oral cancer just from this small town office break room.
That is, until you discover you have lung cancer – lung cancer, and you haven’t smoked a day in your entire life. The only exposure you’ve had to anything that could cause such a tragic diagnosis is the 15 years you worked for the public office in that small town, inhaling second hand smoke.
According to the National Cancer Institute (NCI), second hand smoke is “is the combination of sidestream smoke (the smoke given off by the burning end of a tobacco product) and mainstream smoke (the smoke exhaled by the smoker).” Other names for second hand smoke include involuntary smoking and passive smoking – how appropriate.
NCI states that there are more than 4,000 chemicals in second hand smoke, of which 250 are certainly harmful, with 50 of them linked directly to cancer. While the chemicals found in smoke vary depending on the type of tobacco, the way the manufacturer puts the product together and how users smoke the product, there is no doubt that it is harmful to those unwillingly exposed to it.
Included in those 50 lethal chemicals found in second hand smoke are arsenic, beryllium, chromium and nickel – all types of metal. Benzene, a chemical in gasoline, is also found in second hand smoke, as well as ethylene oxide, a chemical used in the sterilization of medical devices; polonium-210, which is radioactive; and vinyl chloride used in plastics manufacturing. What a scary thought – that these things infiltrate your system through second hand smoke.
The National Cancer Institute states that approximately 3,000 deaths occur each year from cancer as a result of exposure only to second hand smoke. Daily exposure to a smoker results in a 20 to 30 percent increased risk for lung cancer. Those numbers simply cannot be ignored. You can lower your risk of lung cancer and oral cancer if you take preventative measures now.

