Reanalysis Of Cigarettes Confirms Tobacco Companies Increased Addictive Nicotine 11 Percent
Fri, 19 Jan 2007 04:00 AM EST
... A reanalysis of nicotine yield from major brand name cigarettes sold in MA from 1997 to 2005 has confirmed that manufacturers steadily increased the levels of this addictive agent. Increases in smoke nicotine yield per cigarette averaged 1.6 percent each year or about 11 percent over a seven-year period (1998-2005). Harvard School of Public Health researchers found manufacturers accomplished the increase not only by intensifying nicotine concentration but also by modifying design features to increase the number of puffs per cigarette. ...
Related Topics
- Tobacco
- Tobacco Use
- Smokeless Tobacco
- Smoking
- Carcinogens
- Nicotine Gum
- Terrorist Attacks
- Nicotine Inhaler
- Environmental Tobacco Smoke
- Oral Cancer
- Nicotine Skin Patches
- Leukemia, Childhood
- Childhood Leukemia
- Nicotine Addicition
- Nicotine dependence
- Nicotine withdrawal
- Nicotine addiction
- Oprevlvekin, rH-IL-11 Injection
- Nicotine nasal spray
- Increased infections

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