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Aug 16th, 2007 - 17:49:35
- Dust often, and try to avoid stirring up dust when vacuuming and cleaning - Use vacuums with high efficiency filters - Make sure there is proper ventilation - Wash hands after cleaning and dusting - Remove shoes when entering the house - Cover or replace cushions when foam pads are exposed - Cover mattresses and pillows with dustproof zippered covers - Wash bedding once per week in hot water - Choose washable stuffed toys and wash often in hot water Ditch Camel No. 9 ads, groups, Congress urge. Dozens of women's and public health organizations called on R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Wednesday to remove from the market its Camel No. 9 cigarettes, a brand they say is cynically aimed at getting young, fashion-conscious women and girls to start smoking. Camel No. 9, which hit stores early this year, has stylish packaging and ads that included florals, hints of lace and the slogan "Light and Luscious." The latest ad campaign says "Now available in stiletto" - a longer, thinner cigarette. Also Wednesday, a group of more than 40 U.S. Congress members said it had been rebuffed by major women's and fashion magazines in their effort to get the magazines to stop publishing ads for the Camels and other cigarettes. A spokesman for R.J. Reynolds repeated the company's contention that the brand "is marketed to adult smokers of competing brands." Women who use abortion pills rather than the more common surgical method seem to face no greater risk of tubal pregnancy or miscarriage in later pregnancies, according to federally funded research. The research, on nearly 12,000 Danish women, is considered the best study to date of the impact of this newer abortion method on subsequent pregnancies. The vast majority of abortions are called surgical abortions, usually done by vacuuming an embryo or fetus out with a syringe or electric pump. U.S. and Danish researchers studied medical abortions, which generally involve a woman ending a pregnancy by taking one tablet of mifespristone - formerly known as RU-486 - followed by about four misoprostol pills a day or two later. The U.S. government approved the marketing of mifepristone for medical abortions in 2000, and European countries approved it years earlier. Today, an estimated 8 to 10 percent of the roughly 1.3-million abortions in the United States are done using the pills. While previous research has shown surgical abortions do not increase the risk of problems in later pregnancies, little research had been done into the impact of medical abortions. The new study found tubal pregnancies, in which a fertilized egg implants outside the uterus, occurred at the same frequency - about 2.5 percent of the time - in both the medical and surgical groups. The rates of miscarriage, early deliveries and low birth weight babies also were similar. © Copyright 2006 by DiscountCigarettesBox.Com Top of Page |
