Wednesday May 22, 2013



Local Video


QUESTION OF THE WEEK

Survey results are meant for general information only, and are not based on recognised statistical methods.



Home »  News »  Health

New government plan aims to help Ontario residents butt out for good

TORONTO - A new government plan aims to make Ontario the province with the lowest smoking rates in Canada.

Health Minister Deb Matthews says the province will provide $2 million over two years to help people hospitalized for smoking-related illnesses stay smoke-free after they recover.

She says another $810,000 over the same period will go toward cutting smoking rates in 25 targeted occupations, including the mining and construction sectors.

Matthews announced the initiative Wednesday as part of the annual National Non-Smoking Week awareness campaign, which began Sunday and continues through Saturday.

The minister says the move is in addition to an existing program that has 41 community health centres across the province dispensing over-the-counter smoking cessation products at no charge.

Government data show 13,000 Ontario residents die from smoking-related illness each year, and tobacco-related disease costs the province $1.93 billion in direct health-care costs annually.

“We have to do everything we can to help people quit when they want to quit,” Matthews said.


Comments


NOTE: To post a comment in the new commenting system you must have an account with at least one of the following services: Disqus, Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo, OpenID. You may then login using your account credentials for that service. If you do not already have an account you may register a new profile with Disqus by first clicking the "Post as" button and then the link: "Don't have one? Register a new profile".

The Squamish Chief welcomes your opinions and comments. We do not allow personal attacks, offensive language or unsubstantiated allegations. We reserve the right to edit comments for length, style, legality and taste and reproduce them in print, electronic or otherwise. For further information, please contact the editor or publisher, or see our Terms and Conditions.

blog comments powered by Disqus


About Us | Advertising | Contact Us | Subscribe | Sitemap / RSS   Glacier Community Media: www.glaciermedia.ca    © Copyright 2013 Glacier Community Media | User Agreement & Privacy Policy

LOG IN



Lost your password?