World Smokefree Day celebrated in Hawke’s Bay
25 May 2005
World Smokefree Day celebrated in Hawke’s Bay
World Smokefree Day is celebrated on 31 May, and Hawke’s Bay District Health Board’s new Auahi Kore Smokefree health promoter, Gevana Dean, says it’s a great day for people to make a smokefree wish.
“Regardless of whether your wish is for a smokefree home or car, it’s worth making the wish …anything is possible.
“In recent years many people have wished for their lives to be smokefree, and thanks to smokefree legislation, this is now largely true. Since 10 December last year, all workplaces, including bars, restaurants and clubs have been smokefree, with schools and early childhood centres smokefree 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
However, it’s not all good news as smoking still kills an estimated 4,700 people annually.
“That’s a lot of mums and dads, aunties and uncles, children and grandparents dying every year. I can’t think of a better reason to wish for a smokefree world,” Gevana said.
Gevana said a range of health providers in Hawke’s Bay had come together to mark World Smokefree Day in Hawke’s Bay. “We’re working with the Heart Foundation, Cancer Society, Asthma Society, Sport Hawkes Bay, Te Kupenga Hauora, Te Taiwhenua o Heretaunga, Choices, the Pacific Island Advisory Group, Heath Protection, Public Health Nurses and Hawke’s Bay Primary Health Organisation.
A
number of events are planned, including:
the Smokefree
Rock Quest, which is on Saturday night from 8-11pm at the
Pettigrew.Green Arena Taradale
The Ngati Kahungunu Iwi
Incorporated Hikoi for Health ‘midway motivator’, which is
on the 29th of May being held along the Napier pathway from
Westshore to Bayview at 9.30am
a celebration along
Marine Parade ‘Smokefree - Spirit of Napier to the
Children’s playgfround’ will see 350 Smokefree balloons
released at 9.30am on Tuesday 31 May, in front of the Spirit
Of Napier. The balloons will represent the estimated 350 New
Zealanders who die from second hand smoke each year.
Napier City Council have declared the stretch of Marine
Parade from the Spirit to Napier statue to the children’s
playground to be smokefree from 8am – 8pm on World Smokefree
Day.
Smokefree balloons will be displayed along the Omahu
Road perimeter of Hawke’s Bay Hospital
For facts on the damage smoking does to your health, check out page two of this release, or click on HYPERLINK "http://www.worldsmokefreeday.co.nz/" www.worldsmokefreeday.co.nz/
Hawke’s Bay District Health Board has two smoking cessation advisors, Rangi Barcham and Yvonne Stirling Mohi, who are available to assist anyone in the community wanting to quit smoking. For more information, phone 878 8109 ext. 2473
END
SMOKING
FACTS
Tobacco is the only consumer product that kills
people when used as the manufacturer intends.
Half of
all continuing smokers will die from smoking – an average of
14 years early.
Tobacco smoking kills around 4,700 New
Zealanders every year.
Globally, 1.1 billion people
smoke. Each year tobacco causes some four million early
deaths.
By the year 2030, tobacco is likely to be the
world’s leading cause of death and disability, killing more
than 10 million people annually and claiming more lives than
HIV, tuberculosis, motor vehicle accidents, suicide and
homicide combined.
Smoking causes deaths from lung
cancer, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, heart disease
and stroke.
Smoking causes one in four of all cancer
deaths in New Zealand.
Second-hand smoke
Second-hand
smoke is a mixture of smoke breathed out by the smoker
(mainstream smoke) and smoke released from the lit cigarette
(sidestream smoke).
It is the leading environmental
cause of preventable death in New Zealand. It is estimated
that around 350 New Zealanders are killed by other people’s
tobacco smoke each year.
A lit cigarette is like a
little toxic waste dump on fire. Second-hand smoke contains
acetone (paint stripper), ammonia (toilet cleaner), cyanide
(rat killer), DDT (insecticide) and carbon monoxide (car
exhaust fumes).
Second-hand smoke has been shown to
cause: coronary heart disease, lung cancer, acute stroke,
eye and nasal irritation, nasal and sinus cancer.