Smokeless tobacco still playing with fire
6/26/2007 Munster, IN John Doherty Nwi.com Time was when smokeless tobacco was fashionable and every house had a fancy spittoon. Now it's something that most guys would prefer the women in their lives didn't know about. Yes, it is primarily a male habit. According to the Oral Cancer Foundation, 92 percent of users are male. However, oral cancer won't discriminate in favor of the 600,000 women using nationwide. Still, when most people think chewing tobacco, they don't think about one gender or another. They think about one sport: baseball. A number of collegiate baseball players who chew tobacco were contacted by The Times for this story. Not one would agree to be interviewed -- even anonymously. However, a longtime youth baseball coach was more than happy to come forward. Not because he chews. He doesn't and never did. It's due to what he sees during his daytime job. Jay Platt is an oral surgeon. And about once a month, a young man who chews tobacco will come into his office. "He's concerned that he has a white patch on his cheek or gum and he's afraid it's cancer," Platt said. "We biopsy it and most times it isn't." One would think that would be enough to scare someone straight. However, they invariably tell Platt, "I can't quit," because they're addicted. According to the National Cancer Institute, smokeless tobacco users absorb 2-to-3 times more addictive nicotine into their bloodstream than smokers do. While nicotine doesn't cause cancer, there are more than [...]