Ready to Quit Smoking?
Tobacco Reduction of Amador County is offering a chance to help smokers fulfill a New Years Resolution. Tobacco Reduction and the American Lung Association are giving an 8-session “Freedom from Smoking” course beginning January 29th. This free program is one of many steps the organization is taking to reduce tobacco use in AmadorCounty. Other objectives include reducing access to tobacco products for minors, countering pro-tobacco influences and reducing exposure to second-hand smoke. In order to achieve these goals, the organization will be educating tobacco retailers and collaborating with Amador County schools, among other activities. One of the programs notable accomplishments is the adoption of an ordinance prohibiting smoking near the doors and ventilation systems of county buildings.
According to a study specific to Amador County, there were 68 smoking-related deaths and 74 potential years of life lost in 1999 alone. The County’s direct smoking costs that year was over 13 million, and the resulting loss of productivity cost the county an additional 8 million plus. Since this study, the local population has grown rapidly and there are still a significant number of smokers. For more information on the stop-smoking program, call 223-6638, or visit Tobacco Reduction of Amador County’s webpage at www.co.amador.ca.us.
Common Chemical to Be Banned
State Funded Childrens Mediical Care for the Middle-Class
Its That Time Of Year: Lyme’s Disease A County Health Concern
Sutter Amador Hold Open House For New Building
Kaiser Research Survey Of Adult members To Begin
SAFE KIDS Car Seat Check
Emergency Responders Warn of Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Veteran’s Blood Drive
Blood donations from Amador County donors are estimated to have saved 300 lives over the past year, according to Veterans Blood Drive Chair Robert Saracino. Six Veterans Blood Drives in 2007 collected 396 units of blood. Stephanie Kresse of Blood Source, the firm that performs the blood collection, says the Amador County Veteran’s blood drive is “phenomenal” in the way it has grown. Blood collected by Blood Source is used at Sutter Amador Hospital, Mark TwainHospital and other hospitals in the region. Blood collected at the Veterans Blood Drives also benefits veterans who need blood and don’t have insurance coverage.
The next Veteran’s Blood Drive will be held Feb.4 at the American Legion Hall in Sutter Hill. Along with the usual whole blood collection process, Blood Source will also collect “Double Red Blood Cells.” According to Kresse, Double Red Blood Cell Collection collects 2 units of red blood cells from one donor I one sitting. At this time, only men are being asked to donate with the new process and it takes a little longer. According to the American Red Cross, only a fraction of those who can give blood do. Yet sooner or later, virtually all of us will face a time in which we will need blood. For more information about the Amador County Veterans Blood Drive, call Robert Saracino, 223-4389.