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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. Risk factors that impact the health status of this aggregate are both grand and far-reaching; that this particular population serves as one of the largest clusters of smokers speaks to the greater incidence of social, political, cultural and environmental factors. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCSmkMen.rtf
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to the greater incidence of social, political, cultural and environmental factors. Cigarettes, once considered glamorous and chic, have emerged as the single most
external threat to the health of the general public. The conflict over smoking has become "perhaps the greatest morality play of late 20th-Century America" (Frankel, 1997, p. B04), with
the hard-to-break habit directly related to such diseases as emphysema, arteriosclerosis, coronary heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and a multitude of cancers, including lung, throat and tongue. To
bring the point home, half million a year people die each year from cigarette-related causes (Whelan, 1994, p. 77), with 37,000 to 40,000 of those dying as a result of
secondhand smoke. The economic impact upon society is clearly illustrated inasmuch as a staggering $50 billion dollars is estimated to be the amount of associated health care costs, a
significant amount of which falls upon the shoulders of company insurance plans. Of all the ethnic races within the aggregate prone to lung
cancer, African-Americans represent the highest risk group over Caucasian and Hispanic. The reason attributed to this increased incidence is that of biological differences "between black people and those of
other racial or ethnic backgrounds" (Lee Kim, 1998, p. B01). Statistical findings indicate that compared with white people and Hispanics, African-Americans are more susceptible to higher nicotine absorption rates,
which ultimately makes them significantly more prone to lung cancer. "...Black smokers run a higher risk of developing lung cancer and dying from it" (Coleman, 1998, p. World/Nation).
Lung cancer, arguably the most recognizable consequence of smoking, is a respiratory condition that is often detected in extremely advanced stages, sometimes leaving the
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