Jamaica Gleaner

Stop smoking!

Pulmonolog­ist urges youth to resist harmful substances

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ASTERN warning is being issued to students across the island to desist from smoking cigarettes, marijuana, hookahs, e-cigarettes and other harmful substances.

Dr Terry Baker, consultant pulmonolog­ist and senior medical officer at the National Chest Hospital in St Andrew, advises that cigarettes, including e-cigarettes, consist of nearly 600 additives, and tobacco smoke contains over 4,000 different compounds.

Addressing students at a Healthy Lifestyle Youth Forum hosted by the Jamaica Cancer Society (JCS) at the Courtleigh Auditorium in New Kingston on February 28, Dr Baker pointed out that some of the compounds are found in everyday products, such as rat poison, toilet cleaners and embalming fluid.

An e-cigarette is a handheld electronic device used for ‘vaping’. The device is battery-operated and emits a vaporised nicotine or non-nicotine solution, some flavoured, for the user to inhale. It provides a similar sensation to inhaling tobacco smoke without the smoke.

Hookahs, like e-cigarettes, are used for vaporising and smoking flavoured tobacco.

Concerning marijuana, the senior medical officer warned that “marijuana should not be smoked”.

“In fact, no smoke belongs in the lungs, whether it is weed, cigarette, cho cho (chayote) leaf, anything. Every year, coming into the hospital I have students who have gone to school and eat ganja in brownies, in sorrel and those who have smoked it,” she said.

She recounted to the students a story of a young man who visited her office after smoking ganja and could not stop twitching. He had been suffering from acute psychosis.

“You get persons who are feeling

and seeing all sorts of things, and you have to sedate them. They can also hurt you and themselves (if one is not careful),” she said.

EARLY-AGE ADDICTS

Meanwhile, substance abuse officer at the National Council on Drug Abuse, Daniel Brown, explained that any individual can become addicted to a substance at an early age.

He urged the students to remain in school and not to smoke cigarettes, e-cigarettes or marijuana, which can have detrimenta­l effects on their health and future.

“Smoking kills, we all know that. It is just a matter of time. There is no if or but about it. If you start smoking, it will kill you,” Brown

said.

Now in its 10th staging, the Healthy Lifestyle Youth Forum, put on by the JCS in partnershi­p with a few agencies, such as the health ministry, the Associatio­n of General Practition­ers and the Heart Foundation of Jamaica, is being held under the theme ‘#Mek Wi Talk Round 2’.

The forum is an initiative geared towards teaching adolescent­s about the detrimenta­l effects of tobacco smoking, and alcohol and drug abuse.

It also informs the students on healthy lifestyle practices, such as proper nutrition, stress management, physical activity, conflict resolution and effective study techniques.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Consultant Pulmonolog­ist and senior medical officer at the National Chest Hospital, in St Andrew, Dr Terry Baker, makes a presentati­on at the Healthy Lifestyle Youth Forum, hosted by the Jamaica Cancer Society at the Courtleigh Auditorium in New Kingston on February 28.
CONTRIBUTE­D Consultant Pulmonolog­ist and senior medical officer at the National Chest Hospital, in St Andrew, Dr Terry Baker, makes a presentati­on at the Healthy Lifestyle Youth Forum, hosted by the Jamaica Cancer Society at the Courtleigh Auditorium in New Kingston on February 28.

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