Nationally, an estimated 3 percent of adults are current smokeless tobacco users, among men the percentage is 6%, among women 0.4%.
About 19.8 percent of U.S. adults -- 43.4 million people -- were smokers in 2007. That was a percentage point below the 2006 figure.
not anymore. smoke a pipe bro
All of them
987-999-889-001
Michael Guy Cammack has written: 'Effects of restricted environmental stimulation therapy on smokeless tobacco use' -- subject(s): Health aspects, Health aspects of Smokeless tobacco, Sensory deprivation, Smokeless tobacco, Therapeutic use
no it is not legal
Use of smokeless tobacco among teens had been showing a decline over the past decade-until 2009.According to the survey, current use of smokeless tobacco among 8th-graders was 3.7 percent and 6.5 percent for 10th-graders. Among 12th-graders, 8.4 percent reported using smokeless tobacco in the last month, a number not seen since 1999.
Can't see why not. You can smoke on it.
No. Becuse even if you take smokeless tobacco on a plane then you will get in trouble because even though it's smokeless it's still not safe when on a plane.
No can do Amigo.
larry the cable guy
Yes, through a nicotine saliva test. Many insurance companies will ask you to take this test to prove you don't smoke, or use smokeless tobacco.
Thomas Kent Williams has written: 'Smokeless tobacco behaviors amoung rural high school students in Arkansas' -- subject(s): High school students, Health and hygiene, Tobacco use, Smokeless tobacco
Yes. Smoking decreases life expectancy by 8.8 years, on average, in heavy smokers. Users of smokeless tobacco have a higher life expectancy, since orally ingesting tobacco does not damage the respiratory system. Snus, a form of smokeless tobacco, statistically only decreases life expectancy by several weeks. If you want to maximize your life expectancy, do not use tobacco. If you are unable to quit tobacco, switching to smokeless tobacco will increase your life expectancy significantly.