Up in smoke 呼吁吸煙者戒煙一個(gè)月
Vocabulary: smoking 詞匯:吸煙
Smokers in England have been asked to give up smoking for 28 days this month, in a campaign backed by Cancer Research UK and the British Heart Foundation.
Research shows people who manage not to light up for this length of time are five times more likely to kick the habit for good.
Public health experts say campaigns that include a combination of hard-hitting adverts and supportive messages work best.
Quitting smoking can be difficult. People are much more likely to succeed if they get support than if they try to do it alone and go cold turkey.
收聽與下載
Robert West, Director of Tobacco Studies at University College London, points out how peer pressure can prevent a tobacco addict's resolve going up in smoke.
"We are social animals, we are herd animals and we are influenced by each other," he said.
The initiative has met some scepticism among readers of the BBC News Online website. Some compared it to asking people to stop eating as a way of combating obesity. Others doubt the campaign's effectiveness.
"Its weakness is that it fails to address why a person smokes, and these reasons are as varied as the number of smokers", says someone who signed as BluesBerry.
Another reader, Cazz, has decided to give it some credit. He says: "Campaigns like this won't necessarily prompt the majority of smokers to quit, but may prompt those thinking about quitting to set a date and try. Surely it's worth a shot."
The number of smokers in England is estimated at 8 million.
According to the Department of Health, smoking is the biggest cause of premature death in the country.
Glossary 詞匯表 (點(diǎn)擊單詞收聽發(fā)音)
- to give up放棄
- to back支持
- to light up點(diǎn)燃
- to kick the habit要戒掉惡習(xí)
- a public health expert公共健康專家
- hard-hitting強(qiáng)硬的
- to quit戒掉,放棄
- to go cold turkey突然停止(做某事)
- peer pressure同伴壓力
- an addict癮君子
- to go up in smoke化為烏有,成為泡影
- scepticism懷疑,懷疑主義
- to address解決
- to prompt促使
- to be worth a shot值得一試的
- premature過早