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What You Should Know About Tobacco

Tobacco use hurts your health and costs you in many ways. Here are some facts about tobacco use that every child and adult should know.

  • Don’t get trapped. Nicotine in cigarettes, cigars, and spit tobacco is addictive.
  • Smoking can damage your lungs and reduce your ability to breathe during sports and exercise.
  • Smokers suffer shortness of breath (gasp!) almost 3 times more often than nonsmokers.
  • Cigars, spit tobacco and vaping are NOT safe alternatives.
  • Know the truth. Despite all the tobacco use on TV, movies, music videos, billboards and magazines — most teens, adults, and athletes DON’T use tobacco.
  • Don’t waste (burn) money on tobacco. The average cost at 1 pack a day is over $1800 a year!
  • Cigarette smoking is responsible for more than 480,000 deaths per year in the United States with more than 41,000 deaths resulting from secondhand smoke exposure alone.
  • Get involved: make your team, school, home and community tobacco-free; teach others; join community efforts to prevent tobacco use.

Source: Centers for Disease Control’s Tobacco Information and Prevention Source and OAAC. Additional information is available at www.cdc.gov/tobacco

 

Recent News

FDA Alerts of Perrigo’s voluntary albuterol inhaler recall
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FDA Alerts of Perrigo’s voluntary albuterol inhaler recall

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is alerting health care professionals and patients of a voluntary recall of all unexpired albuterol sulfate inhalation aerosol manufactured by Catalent Pharma Solutions for Perrigo Pharmaceutical Company in Minneapolis, due to possible clogging of the inhaler resulting in patients not receiving enough or any medicine. This recall is to the retail level. FDA urges patients to continue using the inhaler they have on hand.

The albuterol inhaler delivers medication into the body through the airway and lungs, where it opens the airways to treat asthma and other conditions, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Patients could face health risks if their rescue albuterol inhaler malfunctions and does not relieve symptoms in an emergency situation. FDA advises patients to:

  • immediately seek emergency care if needed;
  • use their Perrigo inhaler they have on hand, as needed and as directed by a doctor;
  • have extra inhalers or an alternative treatment available in case of malfunction, as some of these recalled inhalers stop working after several uses; and
  • contact their health care professional or pharmacist with questions.

FDA reminds health care professionals and patients that albuterol inhalers are available through additional manufacturers.

Perrigo informed FDA it has received several thousand complaints about its product. Most of the complaints were for clogging and failure to dispense enough medicine. The manufacturer of Perrigo’s albuterol inhaler, Catalent, stopped producing and distributing the albuterol inhaler products on August 21, 2020, and is currently investigating the malfunction.

The agency asks health care professionals and patients to report unexpected side effects or quality problems associated with albuterol inhalers to FDA’s MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting program:

Complete and submit the report online at www.fda.gov/medwatch/report.htm; or

Download and complete the form, then submit it via fax at 1-800-FDA-0178.

 

The post FDA Alerts of Perrigo’s voluntary albuterol inhaler recall appeared first on Oklahoma Allergy and Asthma Clinic.

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