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Smokers pose huge burden on employers with extra sick days and lower productivity

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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This decline began after the Surgeon General's first report on the dangers of smoking in 1964. This warning could have been made earlier -- in 1957 and again in 1959 then-Surgeon General Leroy Burney was the first federal officer to publicly state smoking was a cause of lung cancer. As discussed in various NewsTarget stories, when the Surgeon General's report finally surfaced in 1964, the American Medical Association did not endorse the report. Just a month prior, the AMA had accepted $15 million in funding from the tobacco industry.

The Food-Mood Connection: Nutrition-based and Environmental Approaches to Mental Health and Physical Wellbeing

Gary Null and Amy McDonald
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Recent comments from Richard Carmona, US surgeon general from 2002 to 2006, are revealing. Carmona says that during his tenure his speeches were censored by the Bush administration and he was stopped from providing accurate scientific information to the public on a variety of issues. If it doesn't "fit into the ideological, theological, or political agenda," he told a congressional committee in 2007, it "is ignored, marginalized, or simply buried." "The job of surgeon general is to be the doctor of the nation," he lamented, "not the doctor of a political party.

The Secret History of the War on Cancer

Devra Davis
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National Advisory Cancer Council in 1937, a group that was headed by the surgeon general, Thomas Par-ran, and included such luminaries as James B. Conant, president of Harvard, and James Ewing, director of cancer research at the Memorial Hospital in NewYork City.16 But creating more national institutions dedicated to cancer came at a price. Folks began to believe the claim that early detection was the key to treating the disease, but such claims raised serious questions. Why were cancer rates increasing when more people were seeing their doctors sooner?

Conscious Health: A Complete Guide to Wellness Through Natural Means

Ron Garner
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The U.S. Surgeon General's report on health and nutrition, published back in 1988, concluded that 8 out of the top 10 causes of death in America were directly related to diet.1 The number one cause of death, heart disease, has been directly linked to trans fats from hydrogenated oils.2 Chronic degenerative diseases in general are higher where diets are richer in animal products and in total fat.3 Our personal choices concerning what we eat appear to have the most influence on our long-term health prospects.

What Your Doctor Doesn't Know About Nutritional Medicine May Be Killing You

Ray D. Strand
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Everett Koop, the U.S. surgeon general, called smoking an addiction rather than a habit, he forever changed the way we look at smoking.4 How? He informed the public about the addictive qualities of nicotine, which the tobacco companies supposedly had known about for half a century. In fact strong evidence exists that says you can become addicted to nicotine within two to three weeks.5 Is it any wonder that it is so difficult for people to quit smoking? I have found it much more difficult for patients to stop smoking than to stop drinking alcohol.
Cooper and began recommending a modest exercise program. The surgeon general of the United States issued a statement in the early 1980s listing all the major health benefits that result from a modest exercise program. The highlights of these benefits are: • weight loss. • lower blood pressure. • stronger bones and a decreased risk of osteoporosis. • elevated levels of "good" HDL cholesterol. • decreased levels of "bad" LDL cholesterol. • decreased levels of triglycerides (fats). • increased strength and coordination, which leads to a decrease in the risk of falls.

Nontoxic, Natural and Earthwise

Debra Lynn Dadd
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Smoking_ Warning labels: "SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking causes lung cancer, heart disease, emphysema, and may complicate pregnancy. SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting smoking now greatly reduces serious risks to your health. SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking by pregnant women may result in fetal injury, premature birth, and low birth weight. SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide." Cigarettes are probably the most toxic of consumer products. If you smoke and the health dangers have not yet convinced you to quit, consider also the environmental effects.

How Everyday Products Make People Sick: Toxins at Home and in the Workplace

Paul D. Blanc, M.D.
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Greenhow was working under the aegis of John Simon, who orchestrated a series of public health reports for rhe Privy Council, a governmental body in which Simon served in a role somewhat analogous to that of the U.S. surgeon general. Greenhow was commissioned to carry out a number of field investigations, collecting data on respiratory diseases among a spectrum of manufacturing towns in England. On the basis of Greenhow's findings thete, Simon reported to the government: In cotton-factories, the carding-rooms are by far the most injurious.

Overtreated: Why Too Much Medicine Is Making Us Sicker and Poorer

Shannon Brownlee
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Newsweek quoted U.S. surgeon general Luther L. Terry, who predicted that by 198 c nine out of ten diseases would be eradicated and "spare parts for the human body . . . may seem almost commonplace." Television aired shows about heroic doctors, including Dr. Kildare, Ben Casey, and Marcus Welby M.D., which in 1969 was the nation's favorite program. Americans thought they had the best health care in the world, and doctors were convinced they had the best job in the country. And yet, patients still died unnecessarily.

Smokers pose huge burden on employers with extra sick days and lower productivity

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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As discussed in various NewsTarget stories, when the Surgeon General's report finally surfaced in 1964, the American Medical Association did not endorse the report. Just a month prior, the AMA had accepted $15 million in funding from the tobacco industry. The Journal of the American Medical Association accepted money from tobacco companies for many years while it ran their full-page advertisements in the journal.

The Big Fat Health and Fitness Lie

Craig Pepin-Donat
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Surgeon General's report concludes that secondhand smoke causes premature death and disease in children and in adults who do not smoke.10 If you are overweight or obese and you smoke cigarettes, the health risks are increased dramatically. Since cigarette smoking speeds up your heart rate and constricts the flow of blood throughout your body, it will significantly increase your odds of experiencing a heart attack. Nicotine addiction also results in withdrawal symptoms when a person tries to stop smoking.

Sugar Shock!: How Sweets and Simple Carbs Can Derail Your Life-- and How YouCan Get Back on Track

Connie Bennett, C.H.H.C. with Stephen T. Sinatra, M.D.
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Atkins bucked the then-prevailing low-fat, high-carb "dietary dogma" that had been backed since the early 1970s with, as Taubes put it, "an almost religious certainty by everyone from the surgeon general on down." But, as Taubes and other experts now speculate, by removing or curtailing fats and adding in a bunch of inferior carbs, people gained fat instead of lost it. (More in chapter 14, "The Chronic Big Killers," about how a landmark study recently debunked the efficacy of a low-fat diet.) The Emphasis on Quality Carbs Endures More recently, other experts/authors, including Dr.

The 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth: The Surprising, Unbiased Truth About What You Should Eat and Why

Jonny Bowden, Ph.D., C.N.S.
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Everett Koop, former surgeon general of the United States, called the tropical-oil scare "foolishness." Remember—the saturated fats in fast-food French fries and the saturated fats in healthy, natural foods like coconut and coconut oil are two completely different animals. Avoid the first like the plague, and enjoy the second to your heart's content. WORTH KNOWING Some of the original bad press on coconut oil came from studies in which they used a hydro-genated, inferior product (loaded with trans fats) that behaves very differently in the body than the real thing.

How Everyday Products Make People Sick: Toxins at Home and in the Workplace

Paul D. Blanc, M.D.
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By 1920, the Yale University Press had already published ("with the consent of the surgeon general, U.S. Army, and the Director, Chemical Warfare Service," as it notes on its title page) M. C. Winternitz's impressive tome, Collected Studies on the Pathology of War Gas Poisoning, complete with forty-one elaborately colored plates.77 This was not, however, the last word on the subject. By 1933, both the U.S. Army Chemical Warfare Service and the U.S. Veterans Administration had been established. Jointly, they carried out a follow-up study among the 3,000 U.S.

The Secret History of the War on Cancer

Devra Davis
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Surgeon General's report had declared that smoking caused lung cancer, this chain-smoking chief began a government program that spent more than $30 million of taxpayer money in the United States to create a safe cigarette in 1967. Similar efforts were mounted in Britain. The concept of making cigarettes safer has an inherent logic. But less bad does not equate to good, as Wynder and others would eventually learn. Like much tobacco propaganda, the reality was quite different from the impressions that were carefully nurtured about filter-tip cigarettes.
In 1957 and again in 1959, surgeon general Leroy E. Burney asserted that the U.S. Public Health Service believed that cigarette smoking caused cancer. Within two weeks of his 1959 declaration, an editorial appeared in the Journal of the American Medical Association, calling this view into question. The editorial claimed that there were not yet enough facts to warrant "an all or none authoritative position" about the relationship between smoking and cancer.
Surgeon General made a definitive statement about what Kennedy would have had to have regarded as "complete information." But it could not have escaped his attention that the British had weighed in on the matter earlier. Three big bombs fell on the tobacco industry in the 1960s. In 1962 the Royal College of Physicians issued a report which concluded that smoking was a health hazard and called for sweeping reforms: "Cigarette smoking is a cause of lung cancer and bronchitis, and probably contributes to the development of coronary heart disease and various other less common diseases.
Within three months of the surgeon general's report, cigarette consumption in the United States had dropped by 20 percent. The report put Emerson Foote into agony. A colorful man with a penchant for drama, Foote was the manic model for the 1946 novel The Hucksters, an expose of the inside workings of the advertising industry. Written by Frederic Wakeman when he worked at Foote, Cone & Belding, the book was made into a movie starring Clark Gable as the fictional Foote—larger than life, full of himself, a charmer who would stop at nothing to advance the promotion of tobacco.
Significantly, the AMA, which had not officially adopted the surgeon general's report, refused to join this effort. With these reports, the formerly arcane field of applied biostatis-tics, or epidemiology, became a centerpiece of public policy. The dangers of smoking were shown to affect sufficient numbers of human beings as to be undeniable. Research findings from the relatively young field of epidemiology became the centerpiece of public attention.

Comfortably Numb: How Psychiatry Is Medicating a Nation

Charles Barber
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In 1999, Bill Clinton convened a high-profile summit meeting on the nation's mental health, and his surgeon general released the first report on that topic. Even George W. Bush, not typically known for his progressive stances, issued his own remarkably forward-looking report on mental health in 2002 and publicly supported "mental health parity"—equality in the insurance coverage of physical and mental ailments. Bush declared: "Political leaders, health-care professionals, and all Americans must understand and send this message: mental disability is not a scandal—it is an illness.
The majority of those with a diagnosable mental disorder [are] not receiving treatment," wrote the U.S. surgeon general in a 1999 report. Studies published in 1985, 2000, and 2001 found that 50 percent, 42 percent, and 46 percent, respectively, of people with serious mental illness were receiving no treatment for their illnesses.41 The World Health Organization's massive study on the prevalence of mental illness revealed that in developed countries 35 to 50 percent of people with serious cases had not been treated in the last year, and in poor countries, the figure was 80 percent.
According to the U.S. Surgeon General's Report on Mental Health, only 2.6 percent of American adults have such entrenched conditions, which are treated—for those who receive treatment—by antidepressants, antipsychotics, mood stabilizers, and antianxiety agents. Meanwhile, more than 10 percent of American women are taking antidepressants alone.

Doctors, American Medical Association hawked cigarettes as healthy for consumers

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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After three decades, the AMA finally admits smoking is harmful After the 1964 Surgeon General's landmark report on the dangers of cigarettes, the CTR stepped up its work, providing materials to defend the tobacco industry against litigation. The same year -- three decades after medical research demonstrated the dangers of cigarettes -- the American Medical Association finally issued statement on smoking, calling it "a serious health hazard.

The Food-Mood Connection: Nutrition-based and Environmental Approaches to Mental Health and Physical Wellbeing

Gary Null and Amy McDonald
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The job of surgeon general is to be the doctor of the nation," he lamented, "not the doctor of a political party." The Drug Industry_ According to IMS Health, a health-care information company, nearly 230 million prescriptions were filled for antidepressants in the United States in 2006, more than any other type of medication. Sales of antidepressants and antipsychotics combined totaled $25 billion. Two decades ago, sales were at $500 million. In the mental health arena, these and other drugs are the pillars of conventional treatment for many conditions.

Nutrition in the Prevention and Treatment of Disease

Ann M. Coulston and Carol J. Boushey
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Physical Activity and Health: A Report of the surgeon general. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Atlanta, GA. 62. American College of Sports Medicine. Position Stand. (2002). Progression models in resistance training for healthy adults. Med. Sci. Sports Exerc. 34(2), 364-380. 63. Haskell, W. L., Lee, I-M., Pate, R. R., Powell, K. E., Blair, S. N., Franklin, B. A., Macera, C. A., Heath, G. W., Thompson, P. D., and Bauman, A. (2007).
Department of Health and Human Services (1988). "Surgeon General's Report on Nutrition and Health." U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Washington, DC. 56. Caspersen, C. J., and Merritt, R. K. (1995). Physical activity trends among 26 states, 1986-1990. Med. Sci. Sports Exerc. 27, 713-720. 57. Caspersen, C. J., and Merritt, R. K. (1992). Trends in physical activity patterns among older adults: The Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 1986-1990. Med. Sci. Sports Exerc. 24, 526. 58. Bauman, A., Owen, N., and Rushworth, R. L. (1990).

Our Daily Meds: How the Pharmaceutical Companies Transformed Themselves into Slick Marketing Machines and Hooked the Nation on Prescription Drugs

Melody Petersen
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It could leave out the surgeon general's warning required on its cigarette packages and in its printed advertisements that said tobacco could kill. At the racetrack, R. J. Reynolds also learned to confront fans directly. The tobacco company had forty of its "agents" roam the stands, looking for fans who smoked. The agents invited the smokers to the company's Winston tent, where they were given free cigarettes and NASCAR collectibles. The fans gave RJR their names and other personal information. The experience helped the tobacco company form "a relationship" with the smoker.

Sugar Shock!: How Sweets and Simple Carbs Can Derail Your Life-- and How YouCan Get Back on Track

Connie Bennett, C.H.H.C. with Stephen T. Sinatra, M.D.
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U.S. surgeon general C. Everett Koop to help Americans manage their weight, launched a "Diabesity" initiative to combat the pervasive disease. Moreover, experts repeatedly point to this link between gaining a lot of weight and developing diabetes. C. Ronald Kahn, M.D., president and director of the Joslin Diabetes Center, points out that American adults have gained a whopping 2 billion pounds over the past decade, which averages out to about one pound a year per person.

Nutrition in the Prevention and Treatment of Disease

Ann M. Coulston and Carol J. Boushey
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This prescription was endorsed by the 1996 NIH Consensus Development Panel on Physical Activity and Cardiovascular Health [5] and incorporated into the 1996 Physical Activity and Health: Report of the surgeon general [6]. Although there was substantial evidence that this level of physical activity would limit health risks for a number of chronic diseases [4-6], its role in weight control was unclear, thus prompting the ACSM to sponsor a scientific roundtable on the role of physical activity in the prevention and treatment of obesity and its comorbidities [7].

Safe Trip to Eden: Ten Steps to Save Planet Earth from the Global Warming Meltdown

David Steinman
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Former surgeon general C. Everett Koop, whose estimation in the minds of the American public has sunk along with stock in www.drkoop.com (with which he is no longer associated), and whom I once admired, trashed Diet in a USA Today interview with the conservative journalist Barbara Reynolds. Department of Agriculture staff made up a national call list to warn producers against booking me. The FDA administration issued a Talking Paper on my book and defended the very companies its own data incriminated.

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ABOUT THE CREATOR OF NATURALPEDIA: Mike Adams, the creator of this NaturalNews Naturalpedia, is the editor of NaturalNews.com, the internet's top natural health news site, creator of the Honest Food Guide (www.HonestFoodGuide.org), a free downloadable consumer food guide based on natural health principles, author of Grocery Warning, The 7 Laws of Nutrition, Natural Health Solutions, and many other books available at www.TruthPublishing.com, creator of the earth-friendly EcoLEDs company (www.EcoLEDs.com) that manufactures energy-efficient LED lighting products, founder of Arial Software (www.ArialSoftware.com), a permission e-mail technology company, creator of the CounterThink Cartoon series (www.NaturalNews.com/index-cartoons.html) and author of over 1,500 articles, interviews, special reports and reference guides available at www.NaturalNews.com. Adams' personal philosophy and health statistics are available at www.HealthRanger.org.

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