HomeNewsTrendsNo Smoking Day: Date, history, significance and 5 ways to help you quit cigarettes

No Smoking Day: Date, history, significance and 5 ways to help you quit cigarettes

No Smoking Day: On this day, the emphasis is to highlight how smoking tobacco poses a grave threat to human health. Tobacco is a deadly cocktail of over 60 carcinogens which can lead to the growth of both benign and malignant tumors.

March 13, 2024 / 13:28 IST
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No Smoking Day was first observed in the UK in 1984. (Image credit: Unsplash)
No Smoking Day was first observed in the UK in 1984. (Image credit: Unsplash)

No Smoking Day is observed on March 13 to spread awareness about the adverse impacts of smoking and to encourage people to quit the dangerous habit.

History

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No Smoking Day was first observed in the UK in 1984 by a charity with the same name. Until the mid-1990s, No Smoking Day was the leading smoking cessation campaign in the UK. It sought to create a supportive environment for smokers to give up. When the campaign began, smoking prevalence in the UK was more than 33 percent of adults; in 2003 it was 25 percent, the National Center for Biotechnology Information stated. Initially, the No Smoking Day campaign encouraged smokers to quit just for the Day. By the mid-1990s, the emphasis had shifted to encouraging smokers to quit for good.

Significance
On No Smoking Day, the emphasis is to highlight how smoking tobacco poses a grave threat to human health. Tobacco is a deadly cocktail of over 60 carcinogens, including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), aromatic amines, volatile organic hydrocarbons, and various metals. These carcinogens inflict severe DNA damage, triggering life-threatening mutations, particularly in susceptible areas like the bronchi and larynx. Prolonged exposure to these initiators can lead to the growth of both benign and malignant tumors.