| June
3 , 2002
Little Rock—Spit
Tobacco Prevention Night, a fun-filled evening educating
youth about the risks of using spit tobacco, is returning
to the Arkansas Travelers at Ray Winder Field in Little
Rock on Friday, June 7, at 7:10 p.m.
Sponsored
through the team effort of the Office of Oral Health,
Oral Health America’s National
Spit Tobacco Education Program (NSTEP), other oral
health advocates and the Arkansas Travelers baseball
team, the outing provides children a chance to win valuable
prizes while learning about the risks of using spit
tobacco.
By
taking a short quiz on spit tobacco and signing a pledge
to not use tobacco, children will be entered into the
numerous drawings held throughout the game. Prizes include
electric toothbrushes, boom boxes and cash prizes. Prize
sponsors for the event include the Arkansas
State Dental Association, Delta Dental Plans of
Arkansas, UALR
Share America, and Community
Health Centers of Arkansas, Inc. While supplies
last, the Office of Oral Health will also provide to
children free T-shirts emblazoned with the striking
“chew, dip and die” logo.
According
to Dr. Lynn Douglas Mouden, Director of the Office
of Oral Health, spit tobacco creates a high risk
of developing oral cancer. In a recent three-year period,
Arkansas recorded 860 cases of oral or pharyngeal cancer.
Use of spit tobacco also contributes to periodontal
(gum) disease and tooth loss.
“Our
slogan for the spit tobacco prevention campaign is ‘Spit
Tobacco: Chew, Dip and Die’ because we wanted a direct
message to help people make the decision to not use
tobacco,” Mouden said, “We want people to know the real
dangers of using spit tobacco.”
NSTEP’s
slogan further educates with “Smokeless Does Not Mean
Harmless” to denote that spit tobacco is not a safe
alternative to smoking.
The
use of spit tobacco is so detrimental to health that
the use of spit tobacco by players is banned in all
minor league baseball games. “Spit tobacco was once
referred to as either chewing tobacco or smokeless tobacco.
However, the term ‘spit tobacco’ more accurately describes
the habit,” Mouden said. He encourages everyone to come
out to the game, enjoy the Travelers and help stop the
use of spit tobacco.
The
Surgeon General’s Report on Oral Health is a wake-up
call for the nation. It also should serve as notice
for Arkansas. Americans heard the message of “Look ma,
no cavities” starting in the 1960s. It’s time for Arkansans
to realize the problems and disparities of oral health
in the state. Everyone should understand, as former
Surgeon General C. Everett Koop said, “You can’t be
healthy without good oral health.”
For
more information, visit the Arkansas Department of Health’s
Web site at
www.healthyarkansas.com.
###
|