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You are here: Home / Archives for teenagers

Teenagers who Smoke E-Cigarettes are Highly Likely to Smoke Tobacco

January 26, 2016 By Barbara Mast 2 Comments

"e-cigarette"
"e-cigarette"

The teenagers who smoke e-cigarettes are very likely to turn to the tobacco ones.

A study shows that the teenagers who smoke e-cigarettes are highly likely to smoke tobacco in the future. Apparently, the teens who smoke e-cigarettes are three times more likely to start smoking tobacco, one year after they started smoking e-cigarettes. The teenagers who have never tried e-cigarettes were less likely to start smoking.

Also, even though the developers of the e-cigarettes promote them as a way to stop smoking tobacco, the researchers said that there is no evidence that the e-cigarettes can cure that habit. Among the teenagers involved in the study, the ones who smoked e-cigarettes didn’t see a major decrease in their tobacco consume in the course of an year. The researchers want to warn the teens and their parents about the dangers of the e-cigarettes, as they are a factor that can push teens into tobacco smoking.

The team of researchers from the Hawaii University situated in Honolulu decide to see which exactly is the connection between the e-cigarettes and the tobacco ones. For their research, they surveyed more than 2,300 teenagers from six different high school situated in the area. The students involved were mainly in the 9th and 10th grade. They were asked about their smoking habits, parental support and their degree of rebelliousness.

After the teenagers were surveyed by the team, the researchers left and returned one year later to see how the situations have changed. The students who smoked tobacco the first time counted for 15%, which increased to 21% a year later. Also, the number of students who smoked e-cigarettes increased from 31% to 38%. After the researchers analyzed the results and the variables, they discovered that the probability of smoking tobacco increased with 14% for the teens who previously smoked e-cigarettes. The teens who have never smoked e-cigarettes were only 5% likely to try them. 68% of the survey participants revealed that e-cigarettes were healthier than the tobacco ones.

The factors that influenced the smoking were also the gender, the parental education, the parental support, the age, the ethnicity and the degree of rebelliousness. Native Hawaiians and Caucasians were more likely to smoke than the Asian Americans. The researchers said that the teens are more likely to turn to tobacco cigarettes, because the e-cigarettes expose them to low levels of nicotine and then they want to feel a bigger nicotine kick so they turn to tobacco.

The study which revealed that the teenagers who smoke e-cigarettes are highly likely to smoke tobacco was published in Tobacco Control, on Monday.

Image Source: www.upload.wikimedia.org

Filed Under: Health Tagged With: degree of rebelliousness, e-cigarettes, Hawaii, parental support, smoke tobacco, students, teenagers

Weight-loss Surgery May Have Long-term Effects for Teenagers

November 7, 2015 By Barbara Mast Leave a Comment

Weight-loss surgery may have long-term for teenagers choosing to undergo surgical procedures in order to fight obesity and get back on a healthy track.
Weight-loss surgery may have long-term for teenagers choosing to undergo surgical procedures in order to fight obesity and get back on a healthy track.

Weight-loss surgery may have long-term for teenagers choosing to undergo surgical procedures in order to fight obesity and get back on a healthy track.

Weight-loss surgery may have long-term for teenagers choosing to undergo surgical procedures in order to fight obesity and get back on a healthy track.

A new research has followed the effects of gastric bypass surgery or other weight-loss surgeries for teenagers. While significant benefits have been observed, there are also drawbacks that the authors of the study published in the New England Journal of Medicine warn about.

The study focused on 228 teenagers weighing 330 pounds on average at the time they opted for weight-loss surgery. Over three years, they lost over 90 pounds on average. While this is certainly a success, it is more important to focus on the health problems inflicted by obesity.

The research team found that for a large number of the patients included in the study gastric bypass surgery or any other weight-loss surgery also decreased the rate of associated illnesses. Before the surgical interventions, 75 percent of the teenagers were found to have alarmingly high levels of blood fat. After they underwent the respective procedures, significantly lower unhealthy blood fat levels benefited two-thirds of the teenagers.

Similarly, of the 40 percent of the patients who were found to have high blood pressures, three quarters had normal blood pressure levels following weight-loss surgery. The significant diminishing of type 2 diabetes in 90 percent of the patients was also an important gain.

Obesity is affecting approximately 18 percent of U.S. teenagers today. Health issues associated with obesity trigger long-term health conditions that may eventually prove fatal. While a healthy lifestyle is recommended, in some cases weight-loss surgery may have long-term for teenagers.

According to the authors:

“We documented the durability of clinically meaningful weight loss and improvements in key health conditions and weight-related quality of life among adolescents who underwent gastric bypass surgery or sleeve gastrectomy”.

From this standpoint, the authors urge caution in interpreting the results of their study. To accurately determine the long-term effect of weight-loss surgery for teenagers and how these procedures affect adult health, longer and larger studies should be conducted.

As per the drawbacks of teenager weight-loss surgery, the research team observed that approximately 50 percent of the patients had low iron levels. Previously, only 5 percent presented this problem. For others, it was necessary that physicians intervene to remove the gallbladder as well.

Weight loss surgery remains a safe option where exercise and diet prove ineffective. Nonetheless, larger randomized trials should be conducted in order to fully understand the complex effects of the procedures.
Photo Credits: freestockphotos.biz

Filed Under: Health Tagged With: gastric bypass surgery, obesity, teenagers, weight-loss surgery

Teens using E-cigarettes: More likely to smoke real cigarettes?

July 27, 2015 By Adam Lynch 1 Comment

E-cigarette AddictionA brand new developed study shows that teenagers who are using e-cigarettes are prone to use tobacco cigarettes.

Researchers found out that about 10 percent of teenagers would engage in using personal vaporizers, whereas they would be tempted to try out real cigarettes as well.

Jessica Barrington-Trimis, the lead author of the study, reported that e-cigarettes contain nicotine, fact which would create a psychologically-induced dependency on nicotine, and real cigarette use.

Barrington-Trimis said that e-cigarettes are becoming normalized, as a result of factors which would indicate a positive social environment.

The study was conducted upon 11th and 12th graders from Southern California, and around 2.000 students were involved. The researchers discovered that these students also have an e-cigarette user either at home or among their friends.

Barrington-Trimis’s findings, detailed in the journal Pediatrics, show that a teenager whose close friends would be e-cigarette users, would also be an e-cigarette user themselves. Also, the scientists found out that the teens who would use e-cigarettes, would also have an e-smoker in the family or amongst their friends.

So, unlike high-school students who wouldn’t smoke at all, 10 percent of teenagers who would use electronic cigarettes would be more prone to use real cigarettes.

Those who were submitted to the studies said that they didn’t believe that e-cigarettes were harmful, or that they would pose a health risk whatsoever.

A recent study also showed the fact that, during 2011-2014, e-cigarettes were becoming popular amongst adult and young Americans, especially among high-school students.

Nevertheless, that particular study also showed that those teenagers who would smoke e-cigarettes, would not be inclined nor would they have a tendency to smoke real cigarettes. Researchers said that 40 percent of the students wouldn’t even intend to try real cigarettes anyhow.

However, many of the teens who wouldn’t start smoking, would still be exposed to high-levels of nicotine, throughout e-cigarettes. According to Vaughan Rees, professor at the Center for Global Tobacco Control, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, tobacco-control extents failed and the kids would still be curious about e-smoking.

Even though the sale of e-cigarettes to minors is illegal, the FBA cannot control them, as they aren’t marketed as devices from smoking discontinuance.

Photo Credits http://www.101monkey.com//

Filed Under: Health Tagged With: e-cigarettes, teenagers, tobacco

Person from Ottawa Detained over Missing Teenage Girls

March 12, 2015 By Renee Johnson Leave a Comment

GirlsOfficials in Turkey announced they have detained a person from Ottawa Canada who they believe helped three teenage girls get into Syria with the intent on joining ISIS. The foreign intelligence operative has been charged with a crime.

Although the Turkish government has been questioned, they are remaining quiet about most of the details pertaining to the individual. However, they have stressed that this person is not a Canadian citizen nor an employee of Canada’s security agency, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service or CSIS although someone close to the situation said the individual is in fact a member of CSIS.

Steven Blaney, Public Safety Minister stated that they are fully aware of reports being made but because this is an operational issue of national security, no information can be released.

Mevlut Cavusoglu, foreign minister from Turkey said the suspect provided assistance to the three teenage girls although he has worked for CSIS of a country not affiliated with the US-led coalition that is fighting against ISIS. When pressed for the country the individual is from, he declined to comment, simply stating it was not the US or a European Union Member.

He was again questioned about the person who helped the girls, to which Cavusoglu said it was someone who works for the intelligence service of a country that is connected to the coalition.

Reportedly, the person was detained over a week ago. The Foreign Office in London confirmed they knew about the arrest and that the families of the three teenage girls were made aware as well.

Immediately after being informed of the person’s arrest, authorities in the United Kingdom acted.

The three girls are all from Britain and soon after flying through Turkey to reach Syria, they were identified as Shamima Begum 15, Amira Abase 15, and Kadiza Sultana 16. They left their home in Britain last month and at some point, crossed into Syria in an effort to join ISIS as fighter brides.

Since then, there has been a tremendous amount of tension between Turkey and Britain, each blaming one another for the girls making it to their final destination. Turkey believes that Britain failed to notify the property authorities that would have allowed the teens to reach their country while Britain blames Turkey because they did not stop them from crossing over into Syria.

In addition to images of the girls at the airport in Britain on the first leg of the trip, the last seen images were released earlier this month in the form of surveillance video that clearly shows all three girls were at a bust terminal in Istanbul in a city that closely borders Syria. Because of that, there is now no question that the three teenagers reached their intended goal.

Filed Under: World Tagged With: arrest, brides, Britain, Canadian Security Intelligence Service, CSIS, girls, ISIS, Islamic State, militants, Syria, teenagers, Turkey

Multistate Manhunt Leads to the Arrest of Kentucky Teens

January 18, 2015 By Jeremy Kennedy Leave a Comment

TeenagersAfter being on the run for two weeks and leaving a trail of destruction in their wake, 18-year-old Dalton Hayes and 13-year-old Cheyenne Phillips were arrested in Panama City Beach Florida.

While on the run, the teenagers stole three vehicles in various states, two of which had guns inside. What had authorities most concerned is that while running, the couple’s behavior became increasing more brazen and dangerous. As stated by Norman Chaffins, Sheriff and former school resource officer, Dalton went to the same school and has a history of making very bad decisions.

In high school, Dalton was extremely defiant to school officials and was known to have disciplinary problems. More recently, he was charged with a burglary and while on the run with under-aged Cheyenne was out on bond for that crime.

It all started on January 3 when Cheyenne’s family reported her missing from the Clarkson Kentucky home. Following, authorities spoke with Dalton’s family only to learn that he had not been heard of since a text message on January 6. Law enforcement put two and two together and with Cheyenne being a minor child, the hunt began.

To get out of Clarkson, the couple stole a truck. According to the owner, Jim McGrew, the vehicle was stolen out of his garage. Shortly after fleeing, the truck was wrecked into a fence, causing roughly $7,100 damage. At that time, Dalton and Cheyenne ran on foot only to steal a Toyota Tacoma truck one hour later but this time, there was a firearm inside.

Authorities discovered the second truck just south of Atlanta in Henry County Georgia. During the first week, the teenagers were captured on surveillance at a Wal-Mart Store in Manning, South Carolina and then at some point, they stole a Toyota Tundra belonging to a local firefighter that contained a .45 and .38 caliber gun inside.

In an official statement from the Grayson County Sheriff’s Department in Kentucky, the couple was found sleeping in the last truck they stole. Quickly, the vehicle was surrounded by law enforcement officials with both teenagers taken into custody without any problem.

At this time, officials are working to get Dalton and Cheyenne extradited to Kentucky where they both face a number of very serious felony charges. Cheyenne is still in custody in the state of Florida at the Department of Children and Families while Dalton is in jail.

In addition to the charges for the stolen vehicles, Dalton could face kidnapping and other charges because of taking an under-aged girl across multiple state lines. If it is proven that the couple was intimate, rapes charges could also apply.

Filed Under: U.S. Tagged With: arrest, auto theft, Cheyenne Phillips, Dalton Hayes, felonies, firearms, Kentucky, teenagers

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