The rate of smoking cigarettes has steadily declined since the 1960s – when Congress required warnings on cigarette boxes.
Regina Barber and Emily Kwong of NPR's Short Wave talk about the brain benefits of quitting cigarettes, language development in premature babies, and a mysterious imprint in a Chicago sidewalk.
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Analysis of tooth rings uncovers smoking's enduring impact, offering new clues for forensic science
Evidence of the permanent impact of smoking on people's teeth has been uncovered by researchers for the first time. Researchers from Northumbria University have discovered that smokers have telltale ...
DALLAS — As an associate professor of chemistry and biochemistry at UT Dallas, Jeremiah Gassensmith has performed plenty of important research. But few things are as important to Texans as his latest ...
Smoking and vaping are trending among young people. Like the craze for tea and coffee a few years ago, young people are now hooked on smoking and vaping. Cigarettes, hookahs, and bidis are easily ...
As the new millennium dawned, I noticed that smoking, very much on the wane since its 1960 peak, was suddenly getting a lot of alarming publicity. “Smoking causes lung cancer, bronchitis, emphysema, ...
As the new millennium dawned, I noticed that smoking, very much on the wane since its 1960 peak, was suddenly getting a lot of alarming publicity. “Smoking causes lung cancer, bronchitis, emphysema, ...
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