Cancer survivor warns teens
1/25/2006 Everett, WA Melissa Slager Herald Net (heraldnet.com) Chewing tobacco is very dangerous, a man who lost part of his face to cancer says. "Smokeless tobacco" doesn't mean there's no fire. As fewer teenagers take up smoking, more are turning to chewing tobacco and snuff, health advocates warn. They're trying to drive home the lesson that a dip is no safer than a drag. This week, a Kentucky man whose lower face is deformed due to oral cancer caused by chewing tobacco is sharing his story with 5,000 teens at nine Snohomish County schools. "A lot of people still think 'take a pinch instead of a puff,'" Rick Bender told students at Weston High School in Arlington on Tuesday, quoting a 1970s advertisement that influenced him. Bender and health organizations worry that the industry term "smokeless tobacco" is misleading and are urging a new term: "spit tobacco." "Tobacco is tobacco. ... The bottom line, gang: No matter how old you are, the day you start is the day you put your body at risk," Bender said. Bender started using chewing tobacco at age 12, influenced by friends who smoked cigarettes, advertising and a love of the chew-happy baseball culture. By 26, he was diagnosed with an aggressive form of oral cancer and underwent four major surgeries, losing half his jaw, a third of his tongue and partial use of his right arm. A doctor told his wife he had two years to live, noting that the chances of survival for [...]