Categories · Health/Science
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· Tobacco Control
· Lung Cancer
· Op-Ed
· Cancer
non-USA, by Country · India
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Jump to full article: The Day After, 2010-02-04 Author: Professor (Dr) Rama Kant
Intro: Most public health programmes of the Government of India are directed towards communicable diseases such as malaria, filaria, polio, tuberculosis and leprosy etc. The occurrence of certain diseases due to lifestyle changes like diabetes, respiratory/cardiac diseases, tobacco related disease and cancer, has now been recognized, and public health programmes are also being initiated against them. But these are few and far between. Life style diseases have a peculiar "follow others" ingredient which becomes still more complicated due to ignorance, especially in families where the elders have addictions and wrong eating habits, and the youngsters are exposed to the "role model" phenomenon. In many situations elders tell children that tobacco is bad for children and the latter are confused as to how it is bad for them and good for others. This ambiguity, coupled with peer pressure proves to be disastrous for the youth.
Most important part of all this is that the diseases and death caused by these life style aberrations are preventable. . . .
Lung cancer is one fatal but preventable life-style disease. Smoking causes 90% of lung cancer.
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