VALDOSTA — South Georgia Medical Center and the American Cancer Society host a Great American Smokeout Day event in the SGMC main lobby from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. today.
SGMC hosts the event as part of its ongoing effort to educate the public about the importance of prevention, said Laura Love, SGMC director of community relations.
SGMC’s Pulmonary Services will provide free pulmonary functioning tests, and Dasher Heart Center will offer free blood-pressure tests. The American Cancer Society will be distributing tobacco-related educational brochures and participants can sign up for SGMC’s smoking-cessation classes Freshstart and Getting Ready to Quit, said Valerie L. Swinson, SGMC community health promotions coordinator. Participants will also have the chance to enter a drawing for door prizes, she added.
Tobacco use remains the single largest preventable cause of disease and premature death in the United States, according to the American Cancer Society. Each year, smoking accounts for an estimated 438,000 premature deaths, including 38,000 deaths among nonsmokers as a result of secondhand smoke. Half of all Americans who continue to smoke will die from smoking-related diseases.
The Great American Smokeout was inaugurated in 1976 to inspire and encourage smokers to quit for one day.
At A Glance
• Smoking accounts for $193 billion in annual health-care expenditures and productivity losses.
• Smokers who quit at age 35 gain an average of eight years of life expectancy; those who quit at age 55 gain about five years; and even long-term smokers who quit at 65 gain three years.
• Research shows that people who stop smoking before age 50 can cut their risk of dying in the next 15 years in half compared with those who continue to smoke.
• Ten years after quitting, the lung cancer death rate is about half that of a continuing smoker.
• One million people quit smoking for a day at the 1976 Great American Smokeout event in California.
Local News
Great American Smokeout today
- Local News
-
-
VHS Class of 2012 graduates
Valdosta High School’s Class of 2012 gathered Friday night at the Valdosta State University PE Complex to celebrate the graduation of roughly 350 seniors.
-
Qualifying ends
Citizens engaged in their local political landscape will have plenty of options this July and November as dozens of candidates qualified on Friday.
-
Resident escapes from blaze
A citizen escaped an aggressive fire with only minor cuts and bruises Friday afternoon, as wind amplified the flames from the blaze that started inside of his St. Augustine Road residence.
-
Weekend preview with Brittany McClure
Find out what's going on this weekend with Brittany McClure.
-
Popular vendor taken out of the ballparks
With a wagon-load of fresh cakes, hot boiled peanuts and ice-cold bottled water she has witnessed generations of children, or as she refers to them, her angels, grow into adults with children of their own.
-
Three candidates file for election
Qualifications for Lowndes County general primaries continue with the addition of a couple new candidates interested in running for elected office.
-
City, county tax discussions stalled
Local Option Sales Tax “negotiations” between city and county officials have descended from open meetings to a stalemate, with no clear agreement on how the estimated $210 million in tax revenue should be split.
-
Valdosta High principal to retire
After one year as Valdosta High School principal, Rufus McDuffie has announced his retirement.
-
South Georgia’s Ace
High above war-torn Germany, World War II fighter ace Donald S. “Bush” Bryan led his flight toward an estimated 50 enemy aircraft.
-
Arraignment set for Quitman 11
The “Quitman Eleven” are scheduled to have an arraignment on May 29, Brooks County Courthouse, according to their attorney, Roy Copeland.
- More Local News Headlines
-


