Anti-Smoking Campaign Using Former Smokers To Tell Stories Of Tobacco Use

HRMCSIOUX FALLS, S.D. – Colon cancer, vision problems and myths about vaping, using e-cigarettes, are featured in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s new Tips From Former Smokers campaign.  CDC senior medical officer Dr. Tim McAfee says smoking-related health damages beyond the heart and lungs are not well-known, although scientifically proven.  He adds, vaping is being aggressively marketed as a way to help smokers quit, although the research so far shows it doesn’t help. In addition, he cites research showing that reducing the amount of traditional smoking by using e-cigs doesn’t help, either.

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The anti-smoking campaign features television and radio spots, online images and video and print components bearing testimonials from former smokers dealing with major health problems and directs smokers to call the QuitLine (1-800-QUIT-NOW).

‘Julia’ is one of the former smokers in this year’s campaign. She details her life after colon cancer, which she connects to more than 30 years of smoking, starting as a teenager.

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Other former smokers sharing their stories talk about rectal cancer, lung cancer and age-related macular degeneration.