|
 Effective
February 22, 2004 the site will be declared a “Smoke
Free Site”.
No smoking will be permitted anywhere on the property with
the following exceptions, the in-patient smoking rooms located
on the Adult and Forensic Mental Health Units.
The policy is currently being finalized and will be made
available shortly.
Thank you for your cooperation.
Smoking is the most significant cause of preventable
illness, disability and premature death in Canada (Chief Medical
Officer of Health Report 1996).
- Tobacco related disease kills 33 people a day in Ontario.
Yearly, it kills 13,000 Ontarians and 45,000 Canadians.
- Cigarette smoking is the leading cause of lung cancer for
both men and women.
- The minute smoke from a cigarette touches your lips it begins
to attack living tissue - it attacks the mouth, tongue, esophagus,
air passages, lungs and stomach; breakdown products from the
cigarette eventually reach and attack your bladder, pancreas
and kidneys.
- Women who smoke during pregnancy have an increased risk of
delivering a low birthweight baby. More than one-third of
all deaths from Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) are due
to maternal tobacco use.
- Secondhand smoke contains more than 40 chemicals known to
cause cancer and is one of the leading causes of preventable
death in Ontario.
THE GOOD NEWS
- If you stop smoking before the onset of irreversible heart
and circulatory disease, your body will begin to repair itself.
Repair begins almost immediately.
- Within 20 minutes of quitting, your blood pressure, pulse,
and the temperature in your hands and feet all return to normal.
- Within eight hours of quitting, the carbon monoxide and oxygen
levels in your blood return to normal; and smoker's breath
disappears.
- Within 24 hours of quitting, your chance of a heart attack
decreases.
- Within 72 hours of quitting, your lung capacity will have
increased and you'll find it's easier to breathe.
- Within one to nine months of quitting, your energy level will
increase; you won't cough as much; sinus congestion will be
alleviated; and you won't be so short of breath.
- Within one year of quitting, your risk of heart disease is
half that of a smoker.
- Within two years of quitting, your heart attack risk drops
to near normal.
- Within five years of quitting, the lung cancer death rate
for the average pack-a-day smoker decreases by almost half;
your risk of stroke is reduced; and your risk of mouth, throat
and esophageal cancers is half that of a smoker.
- Within 10 years of quitting, your risk of dying from lung
cancer is similar to that of a non-smoker.
- Within 15 years of quitting, your risk of heart disease is
the same as that of a person who never smoked.
Above statistics provided courtesy of the Thunder
Bay District Health Unit.
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