TOBACCO: FOOD'S EVIL TWIN
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One More Reason for Caring Even If You Never Smoked

2/28/2016

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Every time I see a picture of a pink ribbon on a postage stamp or my package of toilet paper, or receive an email informing me I’ve been “pinked” or asking me to turn my Facebook page pink, I marvel at how effectively advocates of breast cancer research have mobilized their resources. Don’t get me wrong. It’s a beautiful thing, and I’m happy to contribute to the cause. I do it whenever I can. But at the same time, I can’t help remembering that in 1986, lung cancer actually surpassed breast cancer as the biggest cancer killer of women. Where is the lung cancer community to emulate the activism of the breast cancer community?
 
Actually, I think I know the answer.  Breast cancer seems to strike randomly, and all women know that they are vulnerable. Some, to be sure, are at higher genetic risk than others, but most of us have friends or relatives who got breast cancer even though they had no known risk factor.
 
The population at risk for lung cancer, by contrast, consists largely of current and former smokers. The 80% of Americans who don’t currently smoke and especially the 60% who have never smoked are rightfully thankful to have minimized their exposure to the risks of smoking and would understandably prefer not to think about it. They may even dismiss the risks of tobacco use as a problem the users have brought on themselves.
 
Based on my extensive interaction with smokers and the data I’ve collected, I have developed a somewhat different perspective. Most smokers start during adolescence or even earlier, long before the age of consent. These youngsters are no match for an industry that takes an addictive substance, processes it to make it even more addictive, packages it in relatively mild starter products, and markets aggressively (if surreptitiously) to children. Though for reasons of circumstance or genetics some are less susceptible to nicotine addiction than others, few are completely immune and in the absence of societal constraints and public health campaigns, the majority of us would probably smoke (as indeed was true of men before the 1964 Surgeon General’s Report was released). The contention that addicted smokers are then free to stop whenever they wish is a myth, or to put it bluntly, a lie. For most, successful quitting requires strong motivation and perseverance, and often medications and/or psychological intervention.
 
So in case you were wondering why, despite its devastating effects on individual health and the world economy, tobacco competes so successfully with food, that most basic of life’s necessities - please do not underestimate how compelling this product is.


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    Welcome to my blog on food and tobacco. My name is Cindy Pomerleau and I am a Research Professor Emerita at the University of Michigan, where I studied the effects of smoking on appetite, body weight, body image, and eating behavior. Please join me in exploring the ways in which the intersecting claims of food and tobacco have influenced the human condition at the micro and macro levels.

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