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Cigarette smokers turning up to roll-ups in the belief they won’t be as bad for their health are now being warned that they are just as harmful.
SOARING cigarette prices are increasing the risk of cancer as more smokers swap fags for cheaper roll-ups.
The idea that roll-ups are less harmful than ordinary cigarettes is wrong, and both forms of smoking effectively ‘rot’ the body from the inside, Britain's Chief Medical Officer has warned.
In their heyday, cigarette holders came in four sizes, from opera length (anything up to 20 in) all the way through theatre length and dinner length down to cocktail length (under 4 in).
One in four smokers thinks hand-rolled tobacco poses less risk to health than manufactured cigarettes, a study says. The proportion of smokers who roll their own has doubled since 1990. But a survey ...
Roll-up cigarettes have doubled in popularity in five years in the region it has been revealed, as a campaign warning of the dangers of them is launched. Public Health England has made a hard ...
Deborah Arnott, chief executive of the anti-smoking charity ASH, said that tobacco used for roll-ups contained just as many harmful chemicals of a manufactured cigarette.
A new anti-smoking advertising campaign depicting a burning cigarette as decaying flesh and tissue is to be aired in a bid to prevent smokers from turning to roll-ups. This comes after a report ...
Women smoking mainly roll-ups went from just 2 per cent to 23 per cent in the same period, despite warnings that hand-rolled cigarettes are just as harmful.
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