Cheryl Cole has reportedly been ordered to quit smoking over fears that her vocal abilities are being affected. The former Girls Aloud singer, who launched a solo career in 2010, has been advised by her management team to try and quit ahead of the release of her forthcoming new album. According to reports, Cheryl Cole has tried to quit smoking on a couple of occasions previously, but has failed to succeed; always returning to cigarettes due to not taking her attempts to quit ‘seriously’.
Perhaps Ms Cole could benefit from making the switch to electronic cigarettes if she is finding it hard to quit altogether. The E cigarette is an alternative form of smoking that does not contain the vast majority of chemicals contained in smoke inhaled from conventional cigarettes.
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A study commissioned by the Department of Health and the UK Centre for Tobacco Control Studies has found that additional help offered to people wanting to quit smoking, in the form of free nicotine patches and extra counselling, makes little or no difference to their success. The research, conducted by researchers at the University of Nottingham and published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), found that additional support, on top of that which is already offered as standard from the NHS, did not help smokers to quit.
Smokers are being turned into ‘lepers’ and are being treated as ‘disgusting and dirty outcasts’, a report by a leading Department of Health adviser has claimed. The study, written by Professor Hilary Graham and published by Cambridge University Press last month, said that anti-smoking campaigns and changes in the law to restrict smoking in public places have vilified smokers and turned them into a minority outcast group.
Another year, another budget, another increase in the price of cigarettes. In the 2012 budget, announced by the Chancellor George Osborne last month, the price of a packet of cigarettes saw an increase of 37 pence – 5 per cent above the rate of inflation.
A study by researchers at Glasgow University has suggested that there has been a positive effect on asthma and respiratory disease problems in children since the smoking ban came into force in the country in 2006. The study analysed the number of children admitted to hospital with asthma-related health problem over a nine year period, spanning from before the smoking ban was brought into force to 3 years following its implementation. The results showed a 15% reduction in the number of asthma-related admissions over the period.
A study in Scotland, which found there had been a significant reduction in the rate of premature births, has linked the finding to the smoking ban brought into force in the country nearly five years ago. The study by Plos Medicine found that over a five year period, there has been a 10% reduction in the rate of premature births and that the smoking ban in public places is the likely influencing factor.