Monday, July 21, 2008
Southwest Va Beauty
As we all know, Southwest Virginia is remarkable is a number of ways. To live, work and play here in the mountains is indeed very special. SWVA is even more unique for VTSF this fiscal year since we have a record high number of grantees – 29. That's more than any other region of the state! VTSF programs will be happening throughout SWVA – in public and private schools, through community service boards, community centers, correctional facilities, and through other non-profit organizations and groups. You've probably heard me say this before but it certainly bears repeating -- Southwest is simply the best!
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Is your passport ready?
Join us as we explore Grassroots Programs: The Passport to Healthy, Tobacco-Free Youth at the 7th Annual VTSF Grantee Training Conference in Newport News.
Click on this link to view the entire registration brochure:
Registration is now open, so take a look at the form to review the schedule of events for September 24-25. Read the exciting session descriptions and find out where you want your passport to take you! Then click on over to our website to register online. You will then be sent a confirmation email with your conference "itinerary."
Participation at our conference is a requirement of your grant and up to two individuals from your organization should attend. We pack a lot into just a couple of days....new tobacco prevention info, dynamic presenters, networking opportunities and so much more. We promise the 2008 Grantee Conference will be a journey like no other!
Breaking Up is Hard to Do...
...with tobacco, that is.
That's what several hundred Canadian teens indicated through a recent study conducted by the University of Montreal. The research cites some very interesting trends found in the process by which young people become addicted to nicotine. It happens earlier and quicker than most young people would ever believe! This study was also published online in the American Journal of Public Health.
http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=4837e433-2a9d-46ce-a4d9-ab95d1312fa0
That's what several hundred Canadian teens indicated through a recent study conducted by the University of Montreal. The research cites some very interesting trends found in the process by which young people become addicted to nicotine. It happens earlier and quicker than most young people would ever believe! This study was also published online in the American Journal of Public Health.
http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=4837e433-2a9d-46ce-a4d9-ab95d1312fa0
Polonium-210
Is that a hot, new sportscar from Italy? Or is it the next version of Windows due out in 2010?
Neither.
It's a radioactive, cancer-causing chemical found in cigarettes and tobacco smoke that tobacco companies have been trying downplay for years. A new study by researchers at the Mayo Clinic and Stanford University, found that tobacco companies suppressed publication of their own internal research about the presence and potential health effects of polonium-210. Based on a review of internal tobacco industry documents, the study found that tobacco companies for 40 years have been concerned about the public relations and litigation problems posed by polonium-210 in cigarettes and sought to avoid public attention to the issue for fear of “waking a sleeping giant,” as one Philip Morris document put it. The study found that tobacco companies “continue to minimize its [polonium-210’s] importance in smoking and health litigation and remain silent on the issue on their Web sites and in their messages to consumers.”
Citing prior research, the study states, “It is estimated that smokers of 1.5 packs of cigarettes a day are exposed to as much radiation as they would receive from 300 chest X-rays a year. PO-210 has been estimated to be responsible for 1% of all U.S. lung cancers…. PO-210 may be responsible for more than 1,600 deaths in the United States and 11,700 deaths in the world every year.” Polonium-210 received significant media attention in 2006 when it was found to have been used in the fatal poisoning of former KGB agent Alexander V. Litvinenko.
Source: Statement from Matthew Myers, outgoing President of the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids, dated July 16, 2008.
Neither.
It's a radioactive, cancer-causing chemical found in cigarettes and tobacco smoke that tobacco companies have been trying downplay for years. A new study by researchers at the Mayo Clinic and Stanford University, found that tobacco companies suppressed publication of their own internal research about the presence and potential health effects of polonium-210. Based on a review of internal tobacco industry documents, the study found that tobacco companies for 40 years have been concerned about the public relations and litigation problems posed by polonium-210 in cigarettes and sought to avoid public attention to the issue for fear of “waking a sleeping giant,” as one Philip Morris document put it. The study found that tobacco companies “continue to minimize its [polonium-210’s] importance in smoking and health litigation and remain silent on the issue on their Web sites and in their messages to consumers.”
Citing prior research, the study states, “It is estimated that smokers of 1.5 packs of cigarettes a day are exposed to as much radiation as they would receive from 300 chest X-rays a year. PO-210 has been estimated to be responsible for 1% of all U.S. lung cancers…. PO-210 may be responsible for more than 1,600 deaths in the United States and 11,700 deaths in the world every year.” Polonium-210 received significant media attention in 2006 when it was found to have been used in the fatal poisoning of former KGB agent Alexander V. Litvinenko.
Source: Statement from Matthew Myers, outgoing President of the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids, dated July 16, 2008.
Y St. and You
Applications for the $2,000 Y Street Mini-Grants will continue to be accepted until July 31st. These mini-grants are available to any youth-serving organization, club or youth group in Virgina and can help connect YOUR kids to a one-of-a-kind statewide youth movement.
The Y Street Mini-Grants will begin this September and are an easy way to involve your kids in tobacco control advocacy activities AND help raise funds for your group. To learn more, visit this site and download the grant application: www.ystreet.org/grants. Two thousand bucks could buy a lot of t-shirts, pizzas, or GAS for your student organization!
The Y Street Mini-Grants will begin this September and are an easy way to involve your kids in tobacco control advocacy activities AND help raise funds for your group. To learn more, visit this site and download the grant application: www.ystreet.org/grants. Two thousand bucks could buy a lot of t-shirts, pizzas, or GAS for your student organization!
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