PRESS RELEASE
Grandparents' Day

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: August 21, 2006
From: PressRelease@smokefreesociety.org
Sent: Tuesday , August 15, 2006, 11:11 AM
To: Press
Subject: Celebrate National Grandparents’ Day Smoke Free! 
Importance: High
Video:  
Contact: Lane Fitzgibbons
  lane@smokefreesociety.org
  (561) 844-5856

Celebrate National Grandparents’ Day Smoke Free 
Top 5 Ways How Grandparents Can Help Their Loved Ones Not to Smoke

Palm Beach, Fla, August 22, 2006 – This National Grandparents’ Day, September 10, Smoke Free Society brings awareness that it's never too late to quit smoking and though people may have smoked for years, the benefits they'll enjoy when they quit will begin within 20 minutes of their last cigarette, and will continue for years to come. Life is too short and no one deserves to live a miserable last few years dying a slow death.

“My mother survived lung cancer, but she couldn’t outlast Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). Any smoker who


Photo: SFSC

is not afraid of cancer should spend a few hours with someone with advanced COPD to see what it does, not only to the person with COPD but to their family as well. The cost of care and the emotional toll on family members can be astronomical,” said Christina O’Neill, managing editor, Worcester Business Journal, Worcester, MA. O'Neill wrote to warn others of this most debilitating disease. “Increased awareness of what COPD does – before it’s too late – could and should keep our young people from starting to smoke, and could be one of the most important lessons grandparents can teach their children and grandchildren,” she continued.

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, COPD, is a progressive impairment of lung function, and it’s the fourth leading cause of death in the United States. This dreadful disease has been the diagnosis for 10 million people, BUT an estimated 14 million people in the U.S. may have it and have not yet been diagnosed. The two most common forms of COPD are emphysema (the actual loss of lung tissue) and chronic bronchitis (the shrinking of the lung passages). The more severe COPD is, the more at risk the person is for problems such as heart failure and the more likely their overall quality of life will be impaired. Smoking causes nearly 90 percent of COPD cases and estimates show that almost 20 percent of long-term smokers will develop COPD.

“Within weeks of the first COPD flare-up, my mother’s difficulty breathing cost her her independence," said O'Neill. "She required supplemental oxygen 24 hours a day, and a wheelchair. Her short-term memory clouded. Our roles became reversed as I took charge of her financial affairs and arranged for her medical care. Our activities together narrowed down to my transferring her from bed to wheelchair to destination, and back again.”

“It was heartbreaking to watch mom, a former language teacher, losing her innate talent to relate to people," she added. "Her grandchildren never knew mom as the vivacious, energetic person she had once been. While she received excellent medical care at the end of her life, nothing could replace her lost health. Mom died in 2004. I often dream of her as she was when she was healthy. I hold onto that memory, and only wish my niece and nephew could have seen her that way, too.” To read more of O'Neill's moving story, please visit:
www.smokefreesociety.org today.

For related photo: http://www.smokefreesociety.org/Press/PRelease/Grandparent-Photo.asp

 

History- The impetus for a National Grandparents Day originated with Marian McQuade, a housewife in Fayette County, West Virginia. Her primary motivation was to champion the cause of lonely elderly in nursing homes. She also hoped to persuade grandchildren to tap the wisdom and heritage their Grandparents could provide. In 1978, President Jimmy Carter proclaimed that National Grandparents’ Day would be celebrated every year on the first Sunday after Labor Day.

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Tobacco's Toll on Kids
since 2000

9,604,650 kids
have become regular
smokers
3,201,550 kids
will die prematurely
from their addiction
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$ 27,411,199,137


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