Showing posts with label women smoking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women smoking. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

How Can smoking Affect the Pregnancy and the Baby?

Women who smoke while they are pregnant increase their risk for pregnancy-related complications. Pregnancy places a tremendous burden on a woman’s body. From the fluctuating hormones to the effects of weight gain, even the healthiest woman can develop complications during her pregnancy. Those that smoke are at a greater risk.
Smoking during pregnancy can cause a placental abruption. This occurs when the placenta, the baby’s lifeline during the pregnancy, separates from the uterine wall prior to delivery. The placenta will separate naturally during the labor and delivery process, but when it happens prematurely, the results can be disastrous. When placental separation occurs, it is a life-threatening emergency for both mother and baby.
Not necessarily life-threatening, but still very serious, Placenta Previa is another condition that occurs more frequently in women who smoke during pregnancy. The placenta normally attaches to the side of the uterine wall early in pregnancy. With Placenta Previa, the placenta instead attaches low in the uterus, either partially or completely covering the opening of the uterus. If the opening of the uterus is blocked by the placenta when it is time to deliver the baby, a cesarean section will have to be performed.
Smoking during pregnancy increases the risk of having an ectopic pregnancy. When this occurs, the embryo does not implant in the uterus. Instead, it implants somewhere else, such as the fallopian tubes. When this occurs, the pregnancy must be terminated, as it cannot grow and thrive anywhere other than the uterus. If left untreated, ectopic pregnancy can be life-threatening.
Women who smoke during pregnancy are more likely to experience unexplained vaginal bleeding, and premature delivery. Smoking during pregnancy more than doubles the risk of having a stillbirth.

How Can it Harm the Baby?

Women who smoke during pregnancy are exposing their unborn baby to a myriad of potential health problems both during the pregnancy and after birth. One of the most serious complications is premature delivery. A normal pregnancy lasts for 40 weeks. A baby is considered premature if he is delivered any time before 37 weeks of pregnancy. Women who smoke during pregnancy are up to 4 times more likely to have a baby born before 37 weeks than women who do not smoke. Premature babies are susceptible to a host of health conditions, including difficulty breathing, inability to regulate body temperature and low birth weight.
Babies who are born full term are still at increased risk of having a low birth weight if their mothers smoked during pregnancy, even if they were not delivered prematurely. Premature babies and those that are born with a low birth weight have a much higher chance of developing serious medical conditions, including permanent disabilities, mental retardation, behavioral problems, developmental disabilities and even death.  Babies who are smaller at birth generally have smaller lungs and therefore babies. When this occurs, baby’s first days will likely be spent in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) hooked up to breathing tubes or a respirator rather than in his mother’s arms. Even after transitioning out of the NICU, these babies will remain at increased risk for developing asthma and other breathing difficulties later in life.
Babies of mothers who smoked during pregnancy are at increased risk for being born with birth defects such as a cleft palate or cleft lip.
Smoking during pregnancy increases the risk of giving birth to a baby with a heart defect. These babies are up to 70% more likely to have heart defects than babies who were not exposed to smoke while in the womb.
Babies who are born to mothers who smoked during pregnancy are up to 3 times more likely to die from sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).

Friday, November 2, 2012

Female Smoking

Latest reports show female smokers make up nearly 20 percent of the world’s tobacco smokers, and that figure is likely to grow due to successful ad campaigns targeting women, with consumption growing fastest among younger women and girls.
As a result, the rate of deaths among this population is also likely to grow – adding to the 5 million who now die each year worldwide from tobacco use and passive smoking. The WHO says the number could reach 8 million deaths by 2030.
To combat the millions the tobacco industry spends each year on ads, health advocates are now trying to step up public awareness campaigns along with anti-smoking restrictions, taxes and bans, especially in low income, developing nations with few controls.

 What’s Behind the Surprise Global Spike in Female Smoking?

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Becoming a smoker: Young women smoking

Generally, young people demonstrate their possession of cultural capital and secure their position within social hierarchies on the basis of what and how they consume.To this end, young women’s narratives of learning to smoke and their attempts to embody‘smoking cool’ can be read as the accrual of capital, or the acquisition of social skills and competencies that serve as markers of distinction. Some young women portrayed themselves as coming to smoking with an existing cultural knowledge or‘smoker’s capital’, a natural affinity for smoking thought to occur by virtue of one’s previous exposure to tobacco in their home or community environments. Likewise, through their experiences and interactions with other young tobacco users adolescents described building up their smoking identities and the capital which resulted from being recognized as skilled or ‘real’ smokers.

Smoking is not only a social practice but also a bodilyone, in that how the cigarette is held and smoked can demonstrate bodilycompetence . . . that must be acquired through practice’. The needto be seen as a ‘real’ smoker is particularly evident in the narratives of younger tobaccousers, some of whom are still struggling with their smoking technique and comportment,attempting to ‘get it right’ and pass as more relaxed, competent and experienced. InRenée’s case, age and gender differences contributed to her initial awkwardnesswith cigarettes, as a new smoker amongst a group of older males, friends of her then-newboyfriend.In considering the distinctions young women made between themselves and moreexperienced smokers, a Bourdieusian analysis further illustrates how adolescents signifycultural capital through mastering the largely unspoken knowledge around the correctway to smoke. Likewise, smoking can alsosymbolise one’s initiation of ‘grown up’ practice as ‘the subtle bodily schema incorporate-rated in the cultural practice of smoking are osmotic reflexes of the transition into adulthood. For Mackenzie, this consisted of moving from what she termed ‘fake’ smokingwhen first experimenting during pre-adolescence, to ‘real’ andregular smoking as a teenager. Although not everyone would admit to smoking incor-rectly or to faking it, this fake/real distinction points to the imperative of demonstratinga seemingly effortless skill with cigarettes as a key aspect of the cool adolescent’s socialrepertoire. Consequently, smoker’s capital is not only about doing it right, but is alsoabout doing it for real, as self-conscious smoking does not carry much weight amongadolescents.