Cigarette Smoking and Cancer

  • Cigarette smoking causes 87 percent of lung cancer deaths and is responsible for most cancers of the larynx, oral cavity and pharynx, esophagus, and bladder.
  • Secondhand smoke is responsible for an estimated 3,000 lung cancer deaths among U.S. nonsmokers each year.
  • Tobacco smoke contains thousands of chemical agents, including over 60 substances that are known to cause cancer (see Question 3).
  • The risk of developing smoking-related cancers, as well as noncancerous diseases, increases with total lifetime exposure to cigarette smoke.
  • Smoking cessation has major and immediate health benefits, including decreasing the risk of lung and other cancers, heart attack, stroke, and chronic lung disease.

Tobacco use, particularly cigarette smoking, is the single most preventable cause of death in the United States. Cigarette smoking alone is directly responsible for approximately 30 percent of all cancer deaths annually in the United States (1). Cigarette smoking also causes chronic lung disease (emphysema and chronic bronchitis), cardiovascular disease, stroke, and cataracts. Smoking during pregnancy can cause stillbirth, low birthweight, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), and other serious pregnancy complications (2). Quitting smoking greatly reduces a person’s risk of developing the diseases mentioned, and can limit adverse health effects on the developing child.

  1. What are the effects of cigarette smoking on cancer rates?
  2. Cigarette smoking causes 87 percent of lung cancer deaths (1). Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in both men and women (3). Smoking is also responsible for most cancers of the larynx, oral cavity and pharynx, esophagus, and bladder. In addition, it is a cause of kidney, pancreatic, cervical, and stomach cancers (2, 4), as well as acute myeloid leukemia (2).

  3. Are there any health risks for nonsmokers?
  4. The health risks caused by cigarette smoking are not limited to smokers. Exposure to secondhand smoke, or environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), significantly increases the risk of lung cancer and heart disease in nonsmokers, as well as several respiratory illnesses in young children (5). (Secondhand smoke is a combination of the smoke that is released from the end of a burning cigarette and the smoke exhaled from the lungs of smokers.) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the National Institute of Environmental Health Science’s National Toxicology Program, and the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) have all classified secondhand smoke as a known human carcinogen—a category reserved for agents for1 which there is sufficient scientific evidence that they cause cancer (5, 6, 7). The U.S. EPA has estimated that exposure to secondhand smoke causes about 3,000 lung cancer deaths among nonsmokers and is responsible for up to 300,000 cases of lower respiratory tract infections in children up to 18 months of age in the United States each year (5). For additional information on ETS, see the NCI fact sheet Environmental Tobacco Smoke, which can be found at http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/factsheet/Tobacco/ETS on the Internet.

  5. What harmful chemicals are found in cigarette smoke?
  6. Cigarette smoke contains about 4,000 chemical agents, including over 60 carcinogens (8). In addition, many of these substances, such as carbon monoxide, tar, arsenic, and lead, are poisonous and toxic to the human body. Nicotine is a drug that is naturally present in the tobacco plant and is primarily responsible for a person’s addiction to tobacco products, including cigarettes. During smoking, nicotine is absorbed quickly into the bloodstream and travels to the brain in a matter of seconds. Nicotine causes addiction to cigarettes and other tobacco products that is similar to the addiction produced by using heroin and cocaine (9).

  7. How does exposure to tobacco smoke affect the cigarette smoker?
  8. Smoking harms nearly every major organ of the body (2). The risk of developing smoking-related diseases, such as lung and other cancers, heart disease, stroke, and respiratory illnesses, increases with total lifetime exposure to cigarette smoke (7). This includes the number of cigarettes a person smokes each day, the intensity of smoking (i.e., the size and frequency of puffs), the age at which smoking began, the number of years a person has smoked, and a smoker’s secondhand smoke exposure.

  9. How would quitting smoking affect the risk of developing cancer and other diseases?
  10. Smoking cessation has major and immediate health benefits for men and women of all ages. Quitting smoking decreases the risk of lung and other cancers, heart attack, stroke, and chronic lung disease. The earlier a person quits, the greater the health benefit. For example, research has shown that people who quit before age 50 reduce their risk of dying in the next 15 years by half compared with those who continue to smoke (3). Smoking low-yield cigarettes, as compared to cigarettes with higher tar and nicotine, provides no clear benefit to health (2). For additional information on quitting smoking,

Leave Smoking to Stop Aging!

Also called: Cigar smoking, Cigarette smoking, Pipe smoking, Tobacco smoking

There’s no way around it. Smoking is bad for your health. Smoking harms nearly every organ of the body. Cigarette smoking causes 87 percent of lung cancer deaths. It is also responsible for many other cancers and health problems. These include lung disease, heart and blood vessel disease, stroke and cataracts. Women who smoke have a greater chance of certain pregnancy problems or having a baby die from sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Your smoke is also bad for other people – they breathe in your smoke secondhand and can get many of the same problems as smokers do.

Quitting smoking can reduce your risk of these problems. The earlier you quit, the greater the health benefit.

Smoking not only makes you get cancer, heart diseases etc., it also makes you look older than you are by developing facial wrinkles. Research studies found that smokers in their 30s look older than the nonsmokers in their 50s, due to facial wrinkles.

smoker.jpgResearch findings proved that those who had smoked for ten years or more, get ‘smoker’s face’. The characteristics of a smoker’s face are he or she looks older than what actually is. Roughly half of the smokers are found having ‘smoker’s face’ irrespective of age, social class, and estimated lifetime consumption of cigarettes.

How Smoking Causes Aging?

  • Smoking can accelerate the normal aging process of skin and cause wrinkles. These skin changes occur only after ten years of smoking and are irreversible.
  • Smoking causes narrowing of the blood vessels in the outermost layers of your skin. This hindrances blood flow to skin and depletes it of oxygen and important nutrients.
  • Smoking also damages elastin and collagen, the fibers that give strength and elasticity to your skin. This causes your skin to sag and wrinkle prematurely.
  • Repeated exposure to the heat that comes from burning cigarettes and the facial expressions you make like pursing your lips when inhaling may also contribute to wrinkles.
  • Smoking also causes premature thinning and graying of the hair.
  • It is found that smokers are twice as likely to become bald like non-smokers.
  • Premature graying is also more common in smokers.
  • Smoking one cigarette decreases the caliber of blood vessels for up to 90 minutes.
  • The skin of a typical pack-a-day smoker deprives of normal flow of oxygen for most of each day.

How to quit smoking?

If you leave smoking, you not only look younger, also get numerous health benefits. Here are the best and easy ways and methods to stop smoking and live healthy.

  • New and modern techniques for smoking cessation like – quit smoking drugs, quit smoking herbs, hypnosis and counseling methods – increase your chances of success in quitting smoking.
  • Munch on sugarless gum, lollipops and raw vegetables.
  • Try to hold on to a pencil to keep resist the temptation to have cigarette in your hands.
  • Drink lots of water and fruit juice using a straw. It can satisfy your urge to hold a cigarette in mouth.
  • Stress and tension are the main reasons for smoking. Any activity that relieves you from these like walking, sports, and aerobics help you stop smoking habit.
  • Change your habits related to smoking. Take meals in a different place or in the non-smoking section, study in a library or another smoke-free place.
  • If you feel the urge to taste a cigarette, take some deep breaths of fresh air and hold it in for a few seconds.
  • Build up a support group with your smoking friends who plan to quit smoking. They give you the needed motivation to quit smoking.
  • Save the money you would have spent on smoking, and at the end of the month gift yourself something special with that money.

Cigarette Smoking and Cancer

  • Cigarette smoking causes 87 percent of lung cancer deaths and is responsible for most cancers of the larynx, oral cavity and pharynx, esophagus, and bladder.
  • Secondhand smoke is responsible for an estimated 3,000 lung cancer deaths among U.S. nonsmokers each year.
  • Tobacco smoke contains thousands of chemical agents, including over 60 substances that are known to cause cancer (see Question 3).
  • The risk of developing smoking-related cancers, as well as noncancerous diseases, increases with total lifetime exposure to cigarette smoke.
  • Smoking cessation has major and immediate health benefits, including decreasing the risk of lung and other cancers, heart attack, stroke, and chronic lung disease.

Tobacco use, particularly cigarette smoking, is the single most preventable cause of death in the United States. Cigarette smoking alone is directly responsible for approximately 30 percent of all cancer deaths annually in the United States (1). Cigarette smoking also causes chronic lung disease (emphysema and chronic bronchitis), cardiovascular disease, stroke, and cataracts. Smoking during pregnancy can cause stillbirth, low birthweight, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), and other serious pregnancy complications (2). Quitting smoking greatly reduces a person’s risk of developing the diseases mentioned, and can limit adverse health effects on the developing child.

  1. What are the effects of cigarette smoking on cancer rates?
  2. Cigarette smoking causes 87 percent of lung cancer deaths (1). Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in both men and women (3). Smoking is also responsible for most cancers of the larynx, oral cavity and pharynx, esophagus, and bladder. In addition, it is a cause of kidney, pancreatic, cervical, and stomach cancers (2, 4), as well as acute myeloid leukemia (2).

  3. Are there any health risks for nonsmokers?
  4. The health risks caused by cigarette smoking are not limited to smokers. Exposure to secondhand smoke, or environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), significantly increases the risk of lung cancer and heart disease in nonsmokers, as well as several respiratory illnesses in young children (5). (Secondhand smoke is a combination of the smoke that is released from the end of a burning cigarette and the smoke exhaled from the lungs of smokers.) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the National Institute of Environmental Health Science’s National Toxicology Program, and the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) have all classified secondhand smoke as a known human carcinogen—a category reserved for agents for1 which there is sufficient scientific evidence that they cause cancer (5, 6, 7). The U.S. EPA has estimated that exposure to secondhand smoke causes about 3,000 lung cancer deaths among nonsmokers and is responsible for up to 300,000 cases of lower respiratory tract infections in children up to 18 months of age in the United States each year (5). For additional information on ETS, see the NCI fact sheet Environmental Tobacco Smoke, which can be found at http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/factsheet/Tobacco/ETS on the Internet.

  5. What harmful chemicals are found in cigarette smoke?
  6. Cigarette smoke contains about 4,000 chemical agents, including over 60 carcinogens (8). In addition, many of these substances, such as carbon monoxide, tar, arsenic, and lead, are poisonous and toxic to the human body. Nicotine is a drug that is naturally present in the tobacco plant and is primarily responsible for a person’s addiction to tobacco products, including cigarettes. During smoking, nicotine is absorbed quickly into the bloodstream and travels to the brain in a matter of seconds. Nicotine causes addiction to cigarettes and other tobacco products that is similar to the addiction produced by using heroin and cocaine (9).

  7. How does exposure to tobacco smoke affect the cigarette smoker?
  8. Smoking harms nearly every major organ of the body (2). The risk of developing smoking-related diseases, such as lung and other cancers, heart disease, stroke, and respiratory illnesses, increases with total lifetime exposure to cigarette smoke (7). This includes the number of cigarettes a person smokes each day, the intensity of smoking (i.e., the size and frequency of puffs), the age at which smoking began, the number of years a person has smoked, and a smoker’s secondhand smoke exposure.

  9. How would quitting smoking affect the risk of developing cancer and other diseases?
  10. Smoking cessation has major and immediate health benefits for men and women of all ages. Quitting smoking decreases the risk of lung and other cancers, heart attack, stroke, and chronic lung disease. The earlier a person quits, the greater the health benefit. For example, research has shown that people who quit before age 50 reduce their risk of dying in the next 15 years by half compared with those who continue to smoke (3). Smoking low-yield cigarettes, as compared to cigarettes with higher tar and nicotine, provides no clear benefit to health (2). For additional information on quitting smoking,

Helpful Hints to Kick the Smoking Habit

If you are ready to quit smoking, UM smoking cessation expert Kevin Ferentz has some advice for you.

You know you need to quit. You really want to quit. But smoking has become such a huge part of your life that you just can’t imagine waking up in the morning without reaching for a cigarette, finishing a meal without lighting up or hanging out with your friends — all smokers — without smoking yourself.

How does one go about kicking the habit for good? What is going to make this year any different than previous ones where you resolved to swear off nicotine?

An effective strategy can help. Armed with a little knowledge, you can improve your odds of success. You just have to know what you are up against.

“The difficulty people have when trying to quit around New Year’s is that there is typically so much alcohol consumption during the holiday,” said Kevin Scott Ferentz, M.D., associate professor of family and community medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

“The alcohol makes it much less likely that they will be able to quit because most smokers like to smoke when they drink. I tell people who want to quit around New Year’s not to worry if they don’t quit exactly on January 1, exactly on New Year’s Day.”

Ferentz, who specializes in smoking cessation, said that choosing a quit date and sticking to it is an important part of breaking the habit. Smokers who want to become ex-smokers, however, must chose a date that makes sense for them.

“There is nothing wrong with making that day January 3rd or the 4th,” Ferentz said. “Choosing a day later in the week after all of the parties and activities have died down is probably more realistic. You have to do what works for you because you don’t want to set yourself up for failure.”

Ferentz said one of the biggest mistakes smokers make when attempting to quit is that they give up the fight too soon if their initial efforts don’t work. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, over half of all adult smokers do manage to quit for good. Most of them, however, aren’t successful the first time around. In fact, studies show that most smokers attempt to quit several times before they are able to make it stick.

“People shouldn’t be hard on themselves,” said Ferentz. “Quitting is a process. Smokers who want to quit and have tried and failed in the past shouldn’t feel defeated because quitting is far from impossible. It is actually quite possible. There are more people out there who have successfully quit smoking than there are people who still smoke.”

Smoke-Free Suggestions

Here are some tips Ferentz suggests keeping in mind if quitting is one of your goals:

  • Put it in writing. Write down your reasons for quitting on 3 X 5-inch index cards so you can refer to them when you are tempted to smoke.
  • Explore your motives for smoking. Keep a journal before you quit to document your feelings about your habit. You want to include details about where you smoke most often, when you smoke, with whom and why. Review your diary after four or five days to identify feelings and circumstances that trigger your cravings for nicotine.
  • Modify your behavior. Write down your “triggers” on the left side of a piece of paper and on the right side, jot down how you plan to either avoid or cope with those situations or feelings that send you reaching for nicotine.
  • Reduce the pleasure quotient. Most people have favorite brands of cigarettes. In the week or so leading up to your quit date, ditch your favorites for other, less-appealing varieties. For example, buy menthols if you normally don’t smoke them. Buy low-tar filters or light versions of your favorite brand or try new, unusual brands that you’ve never smoked before.
  • Spread the news. Tell everyone you know you’re quitting to develop a network of family members, co-workers and friends who can support your efforts.
  • Get rid of smoking paraphernalia. Throw out all of your ashtrays, matches and lighters.
  • Go cold turkey. Despite an urge to gradually cut back, stopping completely on your chosen quit date is the best approach to kicking the habit for good.
  • Reward yourself. Come up with reasons to celebrate your quitting at regular intervals. For example, a week after you quit, go to the movies or bowling. A month after quitting, go to a nice hotel for an evening or treat yourself to a shopping spree. A year after quitting, go on a nice vacation with the money you save from no longer buying packs of cigarettes.
  • If you relapse, don’t panic. Identify what it was that triggered your desire to smoke again and come up with a way to cope with the trigger. The urge to smoke — no matter how overwhelming — will pass after a few minutes, whether or not you give into it.
  • Seek help. If you aren’t able to quit on your own, try using aids such as nicotine gum or the nicotine patch. If you still aren’t able to quit, see your doctor about other options. You may also want to join a support group. Whatever you do, don’t give up!

Part of Smoking is Habit…How to Break the Smoking Habit

As stated in the title of this article, habit is only part of smoking, the other and more serious part is the addiction to nicotine. There is a big difference between an addiction and a habit!
Many habits are coupled with biological causes, like substance abuse or smoking. These are more serious than other habits and require professional help. (Smoking might not, but substance abuse does.) We are going to deal only with the habit in this article.

You can only begin to break a habit after you have accepted that you have a habit, you have accepted that the habit is bad for you, and that you want to change the habit.

Smoking is a choice, each time you feel the urge to light up, you can choose not to.
A first step is to identify the reasons and behaviors that define your habit.

  • What is your bad habit?
  • Why did you start the habit in the first place?
  • What things act as “triggers” for you to engage in your habit? These are things that make breaking habits so hard.
    Who are the people who allow or enable you to continue your destructive habit?
  • Who else is affected by your habit? If there are people in your household who do not smoke, they are exposed to a lot of second hand smoke. Second hand smoke is thought by some researchers to be as dangerous as first hand smoke.

The reason why you started smoking might not be the reason why you continue to smoke so you will need to look at your current situation and look at the things that make you want to smoke.

Large portions of the people who take up smoking do so to be accepted by others. After smoking for some time on a regular basis and with the added evil of the addictive nature of nicotine the original reason might have little bearing on the reason why you continue to smoke.

If you know the reasons and your “triggers” you can then think of better ways to deal with those reasons, and ways to avoid those “triggers”.

If you have identified the behaviors the lead you to smoke, you can begin changing those behaviors.

Here are some of the tools that you will need to be successful.

  • A smoking habit, or possibly you are an ex-smoker looking for re-enforce information.
  • Patience, some people say that it takes 30 days to form a new pattern and 90 days to form a habit, so plan on giving this a good chance.
  • Will power, remember you have the choice not to light up, this is where the will power comes in.
  • A reward, what will you buy with your $2500 – $4000 pay raise?
  • Friends who don’t smoke, if you do not have any, find some new friends. Hang with your friends who don’t smoke.

Here are some methods you can try.

  • Go to dinner at a non-smoking restaurant.
  • If you Golf, Bowl, or play cards, or engage in some other activity on a regular basis and usually smoke. Try to do that activity without a cigarette. Leave them at home, or in your car.
  • Have your own no-smoking zone. Find someone you like who does not smoke, and disapproves of you smoking. If you like that person enough you will have less desire to light up when you are with them.
  • The next time you have the urge to pick up a cigarette to smoke think about the things that made you want to light up. Wait 5 minutes, and see if the urge goes away.
  • If you normally smoke after eating, try a couple of breath mints instead.
  • If you think smoking relaxes you, try some deep breathing exercises. This gets easier to do after awhile not smoking.

These tips may help you with breaking the habit, you will still have to work on the addiction part.

How to quit smoking: behavioral habit vs nicotine addiction

The decision to quit smoking cigarettes is a major and life altering undertaking. It is not easy, and it is not something that you can expect to adjust to overnight. For many people, it takes several attempts at quitting before they can completely drop the bad habit. However, quitting is an excellent choice. Smoking is absolutely awful for you in so many ways. Your clothes smell, your teeth get discolored, your nails take on a yellowish hue, your home reeks of smoke. Smoking also gives you a hideously unattractive cough, it increases your risk for heart disease, cancer, emphysema, and many more diseases and health problems. Despite all of these obvious reasons not to smoke, millions upon millions of people keep smoking anyway. Why? Because it is an addictive habit – the nicotine is an addictive substance, and the act of smoking becomes a highly addictive behavioral habit. If you want to quit smoking, you have to overcome both the physical and behavioral addition. There are many different approaches to quitting, and what works for one person may not work for you. You have to find the method that you feel the most confident in because if you are confident that you are going to be able to quit, you are far more likely to be successful. You have to go into this believing in yourself and trusting that you can make it through.

The physical addiction to smoking is a result of your addiction to nicotine. You may find that beating the physical addiction will be easier than conquering your behavioral addiction. When you quit, you can expect to experience several side effects. You will probably be irritable, get headaches and nausea, have a hard time concentrating, and have feelings of depression. Don’t panic. They are all completely normal withdrawal symptoms that your body has when you take away the nicotine that you are craving. These symptoms are stronger for some people than others, but regardless of how much you feel like giving into temptation, you have to stay strong and confident. When you have a craving, you should do something do distract yourself for about ten minutes, or until the intensity of your urge subsides. You could take a walk, do some light exercise, call a friend, or take a bath. After about thirty days, your physical symptoms should drop off. If you think that quitting cold turkey won’t work for you, you could try to gradually quit over a period of time. If you smoke a pack of cigarettes a day, then you should take one cigarette out the first day, two the second, three the third, and so forth for twenty days until you are not smoking any cigarettes a day. There are also several products on the market that help people quit smoking, such as nicotine patches, nicotine gum, prescription medications, and nicotine inhalers. Again, you may or not find these products helpful, but there are certainly many people who have found them extremely useful. Once you have stopped smoking for a few weeks, you will also experience some positive side effects, such as a heightened sense of smell and taste and improved breathing. You will eventually have more energy, and you will notice that you are able to perform aerobic exercise with much more ease than you could as a smoker. Plus, your hair and your clothes will smell far better, and your nails will stop turning yellow. To give yourself a boost, whiten your teeth once you are past your first smoke-free month so that you can enjoy a beautiful non-smoker smile!

As a smoker, you know that smoking is an integral part of your daily life. You probably smoke in the morning when you wake up, in your car, during work breaks. Throughout the day, you are accustomed to lighting up, and when you quit, it is very hard to get adjusted to the loss of cigarettes. You should eliminate anything that is associated with smoking from your home, such as lighters, ashtrays, cigarette cases, etc. You should also clean your home, wash your clothes and bed linens, wash your curtains, and shampoo your carpets so that your living space is free of the smell of smoke. You should also clean your car to get the smell out of there as well. Try to switch up your routine so that you are not as compelled to smoke. Do not hang out with your friends who are smokers while you are trying to quit – the smell of smoke will be sweeter to you than fresh baked chocolate chip cookies. Your friends will not take it personally – smokers understand how hard quitting is. In fact, your friends might be inspired by your courage and they might try to quit as well. Many smokers need to occupy their mouths so that they can deal with the loss of smoking, so keep some fresh veggies on hand and some hard candies to ward off cravings. Drink plenty of water and juices as well. If you are used to smoking while you drive, as most smokers are, then you can hold a pencil or a straw in your hand to combat the urge to smoke. Behavioral addiction is tough to kick, but once you do, you will be thrilled with the new non-smoking you!

Gold Flake

Gold Flake is a cigarette brand widely sold all over India and Pakistan. The ITC Company is the owner, manufacturer and dealer of the Gold Flake brand. ITC is India’s leading cigarette industry. Gold Flake is probably the largest selling cigarette brands in India. Originally the term “gold flake” was used in general for the cigarettes that were made by using ‘bright rich golden tobacco’. Later on the ITC Company introduced one of their cigarette brands by this name.

In the early 70s, the Gold Flake cigarettes were launched all over India. During that period India was considered as a country of wealth and culture. The upper class people used to smoke cigarettes for style. Gold Flake was traditionally marked as a “premium cigarette” deigned specially for the elite and rich citizens of India. Gold Flake, for its high quality and purity has often been compared with gold.

Classic CHEAP CIGARETTES FOR ONLY EUR 6.39

The term “Classic” means the highest tobacco quality, having a recognized high value or position, belonging to the highest class, it’s the first class or rank. It’s everything that can be said about the Classic cigarette brand. This cigarette brand contains the features of all the words that are listed below. Classic cigarettes have a memorable tobacco taste and aroma. This cigarette product is the expression of the best quality and exceptionality. Classic cigarettes are for Classic smokers. This cigarettes product will complete the classic style of the classicists. Classic cigarettes are the style that resist to the times. The impression of smoking this cigarette lasts long. This tobacco product comprises the quality and features that cann’t be expressed in simple words. The Classic cigarettes are the model of the things that confront the time and became a winner over the traditionalism. It’s classicism, it’s of the highest quality – is the Classic cigarettes. This cigarette brand produced by famous in Europe Ukraine Tobacco Company “Reemtsma – Kiev Tobacco Factory”. This cigarette brand of that makes “Reemtsma” Tobacco factory famous far from the Ukraine boarders. In the production of Classic cigarettes the tobacco producers had used modern technologies in order to make the name of this cigarette brand to confirm and sustain the qualities that express this word. This cigarette brand can be met at the pleasant price in the following assortment: “Classic Full Flavor” for classical smoker that like to feel the entire tobacco taste of this wonderful cigarettes and Classic Lights for a more refined cigarette taste.

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Marlboro cigarettes

Marlboro cigarettes is a cigarette brand made by Philip Morris. It’s currently the best selling cigarette brand in the world. Philip Morris is a London-based cigarettes manufacturer, created a New York subsidiary in 1902 to sell several of it’s cigarette brands, including Marlboro cigarettes. In 1924, Philip Morris introduced Marlboro cigarette as a women”s cigarettes based on the slogan: “Mild as May”. A female audience was targeted through a series of ads in 1926 depicting a feminine hand reaching for a cigarette. These advertisements featured stylish women posed in plush settings, and by the 1950s, babies were telling mom and dad what a great smoke a Marlboro cigarettes was. The Marlboro brand was sold in this capacity until World War II when the brand faltered and had to be taken off the cigarete market. At the end of the World War II only this cigarette brands: Camel, Lucky Strike and Chesterfield surfaced and established a firm hold on the cigarette market. Marlboro was reintroduced to the nation in 1955 with the “Tattooed Man” campaign. The image of the “new Marlboro smoker as a lean, relaxed outdoorsman – a cattle rancher, a Navy officer, a flyer – whose tattooed wrist suggested a romantic past, a man who had once worked with his hands, who knew the score, who merited respect,” (Esquire 6/60) proved that nothing was feminine about the filtered cigarettes.

Marlboro FF
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Marlboro Filter Plus
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American Cancer Society

The Foundation for a

Smokefree America

salutes the

American Cancer Society


The Foundation for a Smokefree America salutes the American Cancer Society for its work fighting to cure and prevent cancer. The Cancer Society is a nationwide community-based voluntary health organization, dedicated to eliminating cancer as a major health problem. The American Cancer Society helps by preventing cancer, saving lives, and diminishing suffering from cancer, through research, education, advocacy, and service.