
Self-Screen
Smokeless tobacco users are at four
to six times greater risk of developing oral cancer than nonusers.
And, mixing alcohol with smokeless tobacco puts one at even greater
risk. If you ever notice a non-healing sore inside your mouth,
mention this to your doctor.
Chew on a few facts before you
put tobacco in your mouth.
You'd have to be an out-of-touch hermit who grows his own not
to know that smoking tobacco can be deadly. Unfortunately, too
many nonsmokers--many of them young--assume that somehow the risks
posed by the noxious weed go away if you just chew it instead.
Led on by the examples set by baseball heroes and country
music stars, chewing may be on the verge of replacing smoking as the
sad symbol of youthful masculinity. Statistics show that in some regions
as much as a third of male high school students use snuff or chewing
tobacco, yet only 40 percent of them are aware of the risks. Here in
Texas, the figure is estimated at 9 percent and rising. More alarming,
better than half took up the habit before age 13.
These young men need to know that a "chaw" can
kill. In 1990, more than 30,000 people developed oral cancer and 8,300
died. Such tumors are virtually unknown among people who avoid two bad
habits: chewing tobacco and drinking hard liquor. Independently, each
increases risk of oral cancer by six times. Take up both, and the risk
doesn't add; it jumps to 15 times! A study of 945 patients with a particular
form of oral cancer revealed that only 3.4 percent of them never used
tobacco.
Young men also need to know that oral cancer is a miserable
way to go. Some of the most fundamental human activities require a healthy
mouth. Eating can become difficult, and loss of speech is a frequent
result. Whether you use oral tobacco or not, you should examine your
own mouth regularly. As is the case with nearly any cancer, oral cancers
caught early are much more likely to be curable, and the treatment will
be much easier. Persistent sores anywhere in your mouth--run your tongue
around your gums to check in the recesses--should not be ignored. Report
them to your doctor promptly. And while you're at it, be sure your doctor
and dentist include oral examinations with each checkup.
It's high time we put chewing tobacco in perspective--before
it's too late for more young men. The baseball minor leagues have
banned it, and the majors should follow. Let me put it this way:
athletes that partake in this dangerous habit may be the golden
boys now. But if they keeps up the habit, it may not be long before
they have nothing to say.
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