Sunday 18 November 2007

State-Specific Prevalence of Cigarette Smoking Among Adults and Quitting Among Persons Aged 18--35 Years --- United States, 2006

From : http://www.cdc.gov

Each year, cigarette smoking in the United States causes approximately 438,000 deaths and results in an estimated $167 billion in health-care costs plus lost productivity attributed to premature deaths (1). Although smoking cessation has major and immediate health benefits for persons of all ages (2), the benefit is greater the earlier in life a person quits. Persons who quit before the age of 35 years have a life expectancy similar to that of those who never smoked (3). To assess the prevalence of current smoking among all adults and among those aged 18--35 years, and to assess the proportion of smokers aged 18--35 years who have quit or attempted to quit, CDC analyzed state and area data from the 2006 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) survey. This report summarizes the results of that analysis, which indicated substantial variation in current cigarette smoking prevalence among the 50 states, the District of Columbia (DC), Puerto Rico (PR), and the U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI) (range: 9.1%--28.6%). The majority of current smokers aged 18--35 years reported that they had attempted to quit smoking during the past year (median: 58.6%; range: 48.0% [Nevada] to 69.2% [New Mexico]), and the median proportion of ever smokers aged 18--35 years who had quit smoking was 34.0% (range: 27.0% [Louisiana] to 47.9% [Utah]). Effective, comprehensive tobacco-use prevention and control programs should be continued and expanded to further reduce smoking initiation by young persons and to encourage cessation as early in life as possible (4,5).

BRFSS is a state-based, random-digit--dialed telephone survey of the noninstitutionalized, U.S. civilian population aged >18 years. Estimates were weighted by age and sex distributions of each state or area population. Because BRFSS data are state-specific, national median prevalences are reported instead of national averages. The median response rate for the 50 states and DC was 51.4% (range: 35.1% [New Jersey] to 66.0% [Nebraska]).

Respondents were asked, "Have you smoked at least 100 cigarettes in your entire life?" and "Do you now smoke cigarettes every day, some days, or not at all?" Ever smokers were defined as those who reported having smoked >100 cigarettes during their lifetime. Current smokers were defined as those who reported having smoked >100 cigarettes during their lifetime and who currently smoked every day or some days. Former smokers were defined as those who reported having smoked >100 cigarettes during their lifetime and who currently did not smoke at all. Attempted smoking cessation was assessed by asking those who smoked every day, "During the past 12 months, have you stopped smoking for 1 day or longer because you were trying to quit?" The percentage of ever smokers who had quit smoking was calculated by dividing the number of former smokers by the number of ever smokers.

Current Cigarette Smoking Prevalence

In 2006, the median prevalence of current cigarette smoking among adults in the 50 states and DC was 20.2%, with a nearly threefold difference among states with the lowest and highest prevalences (Table 1). Current smoking prevalence was highest in Kentucky (28.6%), West Virginia (25.7%), Oklahoma (25.1%), and Mississippi (25.1%) and was lowest in Utah (9.8%). Smoking prevalence was 12.5% in PR and 9.1% in USVI. The median smoking prevalence for the 50 states and DC was 22.2% (range: 10.4%--29.1%) for men and 18.5% (range: 9.2%--28.1%) for women. Similar variation among the states also was observed in the prevalence of current smoking among persons aged 18--35 years (median for the 50 states and DC: 25.3% [range: 11.3%--34.1%]) (Table 2). Current smoking prevalence for this age group was 16.8% in PR and 8.1% in USVI.

Quitting and Quit Attempts Among Persons Aged 18--35 Years

In 2006, the median percentage of ever smokers aged 18--35 years who had quit was 34.0% for the 50 states and DC (Table 2). The states with the highest percentages of ever smokers who had quit in this age group were Utah (47.9%) and Minnesota (43.7%). The median prevalence of current daily smokers aged 18--35 years who had quit for at least 1 day during the past year was 58.6% for the 50 states and DC (range: 48.0% [Nevada] to 69.2% [New Mexico]) (Table 2). The proportion of current daily smokers who had quit for at least 1 day during the past year was 71.4% in PR and 53.8% in USVI.

Reported by: J Kahende, PhD, A Teplinskaya, MPH, A Malarcher, PhD, C Husten, MD, E Maurice, MS, Office on Smoking and Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, CDC.

Editorial Note:

Substantial variations among states and territories were observed in smoking prevalence among adults overall and smoking prevalence and quitting among adults aged 18--35 years. These variations likely are attributed to differences in the distribution of socioeconomic determinants of smoking (e.g., race/ethnicity, age, and socioeconomic status), cultural norms, and the strength of tobacco-control programs and policies (5). In 2006, Utah and USVI were the only areas to achieve the Healthy People 2010 objective to reduce overall adult smoking prevalence to <12% (objective 27-1a) (6); California achieved this objective among women only. Utah and USVI also were the only areas to achieve this objective among persons aged 18--35 years. The low prevalences in Utah and USVI might be a result of stronger social and cultural norms against tobacco use compared with other parts of the United States. Since 2003, Utah and USVI have met the <12% target for overall adult smoking prevalence, and California, Utah, PR, and USVI have achieved this objective among women since 2004. In 2006, Utah met the <12% target among men, as it had in 2004 but not in 2005.

The findings in this report indicate that in the 53 areas surveyed, the majority of current daily smokers aged 18--35 years had tried to quit during the past year. On average, approximately one third of persons aged 18--35 years who had ever smoked reported that they did not currently smoke. The rates differed between adults in the 18--35 years age group and the total adult population (CDC, unpublished data, 2007).

Early cessation should be encouraged because persons who quit before the age of 35 years have a life expectancy similar to that of never smokers (3). The longer young adults smoke, the more likely they are to develop adverse health effects that are not reversible. Young adults who smoke include persons who are just beginning to smoke, those who do not smoke daily, persons who are transitioning to daily smoking, and daily smokers who might or might not have tried to quit. Diverse strategies are needed to motivate these different groups to quit smoking, such as conducting sustained mass media campaigns, increasing the price of tobacco products, providing brief counseling by health-care professionals at every clinic visit, reducing out-of-pocket costs of smoking-cessation treatments, and offering telephone quitlines (4). Similar to older adults, young adults usually try to quit on their own (7). Among adolescent and young adult smokers aged 16--24 years who reported ever trying to quit, only 20% reported talking with a nurse, doctor, or dentist for assistance with their quit attempts, and even smaller proportions had used counseling (e.g., individual, group, or telephone counseling) or medications approved by the Food and Drug Administration (7). Therefore, strategies also are needed to increase the use of effective cessation treatments among these smokers.

The findings in this report are subject to at least five limitations. First, BRFSS does not survey persons in households without landline telephones or those with wireless-only telephones, populations that might more likely include smokers (8,9). Wireless telephone use is highest among young adults and decreases with age (9). Preliminary findings from the National Health Interview Survey indicate that approximately one in four adults aged 18--24 years and nearly one in three adults aged 25--29 years lived in households with only wireless telephones in 2006 (9). The exclusion of persons with wireless-only telephone service might have led to the underestimation of smoking prevalence, particularly among those aged 18--35 years. Second, estimates for cigarette smoking are based on self-report and are not validated by biochemical tests. However, self-reported data on current smoking status have high validity (8). Third, the median response rate was 51.4% (range: 35.1%--66.0%). Lower response rates indicate a potential for response bias; however, BRFSS estimates for current cigarette smoking are comparable to smoking estimates from other surveys with higher response rates (8). Fourth, the survey did not include information on the length of time between the quit attempt and the interview. Finally, the number of young adults who quit smoking was low; thus, certain estimates derived from state-level data are unstable.

Effective interventions have been identified for preventing smoking initiation and increasing cessation rates (4), but they have not been implemented adequately by most states. Fully implementing comprehensive state tobacco-control programs as recommended by CDC (5) would accelerate progress in reducing rates of smoking and other tobacco use. Moreover, because persons who quit smoking before the age of 35 years have a life expectancy similar to that of never smokers (3), these programs should target young adults.

References

  1. CDC. Annual smoking-attributable mortality, years of potential life lost, and productivity losses---United States, 1997--2001. MMWR 2005;54:625--8.
  2. US Department of Health and Human Services. The health benefits of smoking cessation. Atlanta, GA: US Public Health Service, CDC; 1990. DHHS publication no. (CDC) 90-8416.
  3. Doll R, Peto R, Boreham J, Sutherland I. Mortality in relation to smoking: 50 years' observations on male British doctors. BMJ 2004;328:1519--27.
  4. Task Force on Community Preventive Services. Guide to community preventive services: tobacco. Available at http://www.thecommunityguide.org/tobacco.
  5. CDC. Best practices for comprehensive tobacco control programs. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 1999. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/tobacco_control_programs/stateandcommunity/best_practices.
  6. US Department of Health and Human Services. Healthy people 2010 (conference ed, in 2 vols). Washington, DC: US Department of Health and Human Services; 2000. Available at http://www.health.gov/healthypeople.
  7. CDC. Use of cessation methods among smokers aged 16--24 years---United States, 2003. MMWR 2006;55:1351--4.
  8. Nelson DE, Holtzman D, Bolen J, Stanwyck CA, Mack KA. Reliability and validity of measures from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS). Social Prev Med 2001;46:S3--S42.
  9. Blumberg SJ, Luke JV. Wireless substitution: early release of estimates based on data from the National Health Interview Survey, July--December 2006. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhis/earlyrelease/wireless200705.pdf.


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Date last reviewed: 9/26/2007

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Wednesday 7 November 2007

Anda Perlu tau aja

Setiap orang ingin memiliki yang terbaik. Namun semua keinginan itu tergantung dari :
1. Usaha kita
2. doa kita

mari kita bersama-sama mengejar cita-cita penuh dengan semnagt kebaikan

selamat membaca tulisandi bawah ini

RAHASIA WANITA

Isi tulisan ini saya kutip dari tulisan karya penulis Ibnu Abdul Ghofur (Nikah dan Seks Islami). Alasan mengapa tulisan ini menarik sekali untuk dipaparkan kembali karena setidaknya tulisan ini akan sangat membantu memahami seluk beluk tentang wanita, terutama ketika kita akan menhadapi memilih calon istri.

Dalam Islam ketika kita hendak melihat wanita yang hendak dilamar, bagian tubuh yang boleh dilihat hanyalah wajah dan telapak tangan. Kaitannya dengan melihat wajah dan telapak tangan ini, ada salah seorang ulama wirai yang berani memaparkan rahasia dari wajah dan kedua telapak tangan wanita. Apa saja rahasianya?


  1. Bila mulut wanita itu luas farjinya juga luas

  2. Bila mulutnya kecil maka farjinya juga kecil dan juga sempit

  3. Bila kedua bibirnya tebal maka kedua bibir farjinya juga tebal

  4. Bila kedua bibirnya tipis maka kedua bibir farjinya juga tipis

  5. Bila bibir bagian bawahnya itu tipis maka farjinya kecil

  6. Bila lidahnya seperti terpotong maka farjinya banyak basah-basahnya

  7. Bila hidungnya cembung maka sedikit syahwatnya untuk nikah (jima’)

  8. Bila di belakang telinganya cekung maka termasuk orang-orang yang sangat senang dengan nikah

  9. Bila dagunya panjang maka farjinya terbuka ,rambutnya (bulu)sedikit

  10. Bila dagunya kecil maka farjinya tertutup

  11. Bila wajah dan lehernya lebar maka kecil pantatnya dan besar farjinya namun sempit

  12. Bila bagian luar telapak dan kaki dan badannya banyak lemak maka farjinya besar dan ia mempunyai kedudukan (kehormatan di sisi suaminya)

  13. Bila seorang perempuan itu menonjol (muncul) kedua betisnya maka kuat syahwatnya maka ia tak akan sabar dari jima’

  14. Apabila matanya sangat hitam (seperti orang yang bersibak) lagi besar maka hal ini menunjukkan syahwatnya yang lagi berkobar-kobar, sempitnya rahim serta kecilnya farji

  15. ketika bersamaan besarnya pundak (bahu ) maka menunjukkan besarnya farji


TELAPAK TANGAN


A. Dengan cara di lihat ;

1. Perhatikan telapak tangannya ;jikalau garis tangannya tampak terputus-putus di bagian tengah , maka kesuciannya sudah terenggut

2. Jikalau urat-uratnya meayerupai putus (retak ) ,maka mungkin hilang kesuciannya .

B. Dengan cara di pegang ;

1.perempuan yang masih perawan ,kedua telapak

tangannya halus dan licin

ketika ke dua telapak tangannya ditekan warnan

ya pucat (tidak merah),maka kemungkinan su

dah tidak perawan .

2.genggamlah ibu jarinya kira-kira satu menit

apabila saat menggenggam terasa hangat ,

serta ibu jarinya merah ketika di lepaskan,

maka agaknya masih suci? Namun setelah di

lepas kok pucat walaupun terasa hangat , maka

maaf ya …? Kelihatannya tidak perawan .

3.peganglah erat-erat jari kelingkingnya sebentar

saja ,lalu lepaskan pelan-pelan ,tanyalah baga

imana rasanya . kalau ia tak merasakan apa-

apa maka tampaklahnya ia sudah tidak suci lagi



WAJAH


1.gadis yang masih suci (belum pernah di sentuh

oleh tangan –tangan jahil ) ,di sekir bibirnya tak

ada garis-garis hitam (bengkak).

2.gadis yang belum pernah di cium tidak nampak

pucat ,bibirnya kelihatan licin .apabila sudah

tidak suci lagi maka kelihatannya bagian tengah

bibir napak retak (seakan –akan terbagi dua ).

3.gadis yang masih suci hidungnya tampak

kemerah –merahan (tidak tampak pucat ).


Bersambung…………..


Baca PUISI AnTIK ini



JUdul Kiriman Suratmu

Yang Bikin Hatiku Selalu Berdebar


Tak kuasa hati serasa,

Ketika Saat pertama kali aku terima surat darimu


Perlahan dengan hati berdebar kubaca kata demi kata.

Terkadang sambil berdiri, sambil duduk dan bahkan

Terkadang tak sadar aku baca sambil melamun

……………..


Makin lama ku baca-baca suratmu

Makin bertambah berdebar-debar hati ini

……………….


Makin lama ku tak kuasa menahan rasa

Itu semua karena :

Di ahir kalimat dalam suratmu

kau tulis tebal dengan kata-kata:

Secepatnya tolong bayarlah hutang-hutangmu,

kalau tidak,kau tau senndiri akibatnya!”


Kau memang dasar keterlaluan

Kalimat itu kenapa kamu tulis tebal-tebal.