Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Thailand News and Discussion Forum | ASEANNOW

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Few smokers know about added sugar in cigarettes

Featured Replies

Few smokers know about added sugar in cigarettes

By Carolyn Crist

 

(Reuters Health) - Very few smokers know there is sugar added to cigarettes, a new survey suggests.

 

In addition, very few realize that added sugar increases toxins in cigarette smoke, the study authors wrote in the journal Nicotine and Tobacco Research.

 

"Knowledge is power and there is a clear gap in awareness," said lead researcher Andrew Seidenberg, a public health doctoral student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

 

Cigarettes contain natural and added sugars to reduce the harshness of smoke, making it easier to inhale. This also increases the amount of harmful chemicals in smoke and the addictive potential of smoking, Seidenberg said.

 

"Many participants told us they wanted to learn more about sugar in cigarettes," Seidenberg told Reuters Health by email. "So there is an opportunity to educate the public."

 

Seidenberg and colleagues surveyed 4,350 adult cigarette smokers by recruiting them through Amazon Mechanical Turk to participate in an online experiment on e-cigarette advertising. At the end of the experiment, survey takers answered two questions about added sugars in cigarettes: "Is sugar added to cigarettes?" and "Adding sugar to cigarettes increases toxins in cigarette smoke. Before this survey, had you ever heard of this effect of added sugar?" Participants also had the option of providing open-ended comments at the end of the study.

 

The researchers found that 5.5 percent of survey takers knew sugar was added to cigarettes. The proportion who knew this was never higher than 10 percent when respondents were grouped by characteristics like gender, age, income, education level, race and ethnicity.

 

And only 3.8 percent of survey respondents knew added sugar increases toxins in smoke.

 

"We were really surprised that nearly all of the smokers surveyed didn't know that sugar is added to their cigarettes," Seidenberg said.

 

He and colleagues are developing messages about added sugar in cigarettes to determine if they're helpful for smoking cessation programs. In a television campaign in Australia, for instance, an ad set to the popular song "Sugar, Sugar" by The Archies concluded with the following text on the screen: "Additives such as sugar and honey can hide the bitter taste of tobacco. But the damage cigarettes do can't be hidden."

 

Noel Brewer, who has researched cigarette pack messages about toxic chemicals, as well as public understanding of cigarette smoke ingredients, is, like Seidenberg, from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, but he isn't a coauthor of the current study. "Added sugar in cigarettes creates a trifecta of death," Brewer told Reuters Health by email. "It makes cigarettes more appealing, more addictive and more lethal. Smokers should be able to know what they are smoking and they don't."

 

"Cigarettes are dangerous in so many different ways that it's hard for people to keep track," Brewer said. "Scientists keep finding new ways that cigarettes create harm and death."

 

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2yBTBmF Nicotine and Tobacco Research, online October 17, 2018.

 

 
reuters_logo.jpg
-- © Copyright Reuters 2018-10-27

Smokers are smokers,you cannot educate them....they alone pay good money only to burn it and inhale the toxicity that they contain.....:whistling:

  • Popular Post

I worked for Philip Morris Australia for many years until the greedy unions screwed it up. What a great employer they were. Give you anything as long as the ciggies kept rolling out the door. Daily target was 60 million cigarettes every single day. Quite often production was over 80 million in 3 shifts.  One of the key areas was the flavor kitchen where sugar, unsweetened chocolate buttons, glycerol, licorice, menthol and what was called tobacco spirit that came in 44 gallon drums made by a famous Aussie rum manufacturer was added to the various blends. I remember some of the old hands adding the spirit to their coffee. Also read a few years back that something from pigs blood was an ingredient in the filters so I pointed that out to a Muslim guy I knew (the look on his face will stay with me forever) who immediately rang Philip Morris and they wouldn't give him a straight answer. Forgot to mention about the spirit to him. Interestingly that didn't stop him smoking.

1 hour ago, rooster59 said:

Very few smokers know there is sugar added to cigarettes, a new survey suggests.

I can recall nearly thirty years ago, my first Thai g/f  had a sister in Bangkok, married to a French guy who imported chocolate powder for the Thai Tobacco Monopoly, who added it into the cigarettes they produced.

  • Popular Post

Probably easier to list the ingredients not in cigarettes?

 

 

4 hours ago, rooster59 said:

Smokers should be able to know what they are smoking and they don't.

I don't care whether or not they know what they're smoking, only how whatever it is impacts on non-smokers. 

So, why is this sh*t still legal?

I roll my own, the first thing I do with a pack of tobacco is to soak it in hot water, this gets rid of most of the additives and reduces the nicotine level. When I strain off the water it is not thrown away, I bottle it to use as an insecticide on my plants. 

On 10/27/2018 at 4:54 PM, connda said:

So, why is this sh*t still legal?

Because it's not actually a fun drug to use. Ask anyone who fought back the nausea, teary eyes, soaring heartbeat, and raw throat burn, as they posed their way to their expensive, joyless, smelly, deadly, minimal buzz addiction. 

Create an account or sign in to comment

Recently Browsing 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.