Quit Smoking withe-cigarettes

Second hand smoke affects your pets

The life you save may be your pet's!

There's always been lots of information about second hand smoke and people but did you know there is considerable research proving secondhand smoke is harmful for pets too

Think about this everytime you light up in your house with Fido on your lap, or when you're taking Spot to his favorite park.

The American Lung Association of New Hampshire provides some stunning facts on why you should consider your pets when you smoke around them.

DOGS

Dogs that inhale secondhand smoke are three times more likely to develop lung or nasal cancer than dogs living in smokefree homes.
Dogs can experience allergic reactions to secondhand smoke. Common symptoms of this allergic reaction are the scratching, biting, and chewing of their skin. Owners often confuse this reaction with fleas or food allergies.
Cigarette butts can also be deadly. Two butts, if eaten by a puppy, can cause death in a relatively short period of time.

BIRDS

Birds can react badly to secondhand smoke and may develop eye problems, as well as other respiratory problems like coughing and wheezing.
Birds that sit on a smokers hand can experience contact dermatitis from the nicotine that remains on the smokers hand. This can cause them to pull out their feathers.

CATS

Cats exposed to secondhand smoke in the home have a higher rate of an oral cancer called squamous cell carcinoma, which may be due to the way cats groom themselves. When cats groom themselves they eat the poisons from secondhand smoke that have settled on their fur.
Cats exposed to secondhand smoke have a higher rate of feline lymphoma, a deadly form of cancer, than cats not exposed to secondhand smoke.
Cats can develop respiratory problems, lung inflammation, and asthma as a result of secondhand smoke. There are 4,000 chemicals in secondhand smoke, and 43 are known to cause cancer.

Other dangerous issues can occur......

By ingestion of cigarette or cigar butts which contain toxins. Death From 15 cigarettes and from 131 cigar can be fatal if ingested.
By drinking water that contains cigar or cigarette butts which can have high concentrations of nicotine
By ingestion of nicotine replacement gum and patches.


Think again of the health effects:
Breathing problems in dogs and asthmaticlike symptoms in cats
Salivation
Diarrhea
Vomiting
Cardiac abnormalities
Respiratory difficulties and respiratory paralysis
Feline lymphoma in cats
Lung cancer in dogs
Nasal cancer in dogs

Prevention:
As in the case of children and others in the home, dont smoke.
If you must smoke take it outside Dont expose others to your smoke
Dont allow others to smoke around your pets.
Keep ashtrays clean Dont leave butts in them for pets to find.
Dispose of nicotine gum and patches in receptacles that cant be accessed by pets.
Consider quitting The health effects of your smoking on pets is just one more good reason to quit.

If you can't or won't quit, consider a safer alternative......electric cigarettes. Products like Green Smoke are devices shaped like a cigarette but they contain a battery, water and nicotine. You'll still get your nicotine fix but you and the people and pets around you won't be inhaling the 4000 toxic chemicals that cause major health issues every day.

 
 
 
Real Stories

Now that e-cigarettes have been on the market a while, people are starting to report their ‘anniversaries’ of tobacco-free living.

Thanks to the internet, he could use the support system available through e-cigarette forums for encouragement and now he can celebrate one year without ‘lighting up.

Although the goal was not originally to quit smoking, it turns out that she is greatly encouraged about her ability have a nicotine-free life in the very near future.

One man reports he is taking ‘baby steps’ toward his addiction, but is thrilled to report that after just 2 months using e-cigarettes, he has quit tobacco.