This report describes periodontal findings from a comprehensive study of smokeless tobacco use in professional baseball players. Subjects consisted of 1,094 players, coaches, and training staff of seven major league and their associated minor league teams. Before being examined, subjects completed questionnaires on patterns of smokeless tobacco use (validated by blood chemistry studies), rinsed their mouths under supervision, and were cautioned not to discuss their use of tobacco with the dental examiners. They then received a complete oral examination that included recording of all mucosal abnormalities, missing teeth, caries, extrinsic stain, attrition, Plaque Index, Gingival Index, pocket depth, attachment loss, and gingival recession. More than 50% of team members reported using smokeless tobacco, and 39% reported use during the current week. Among current week users, 46% had oral mucosal lesions, located primarily in the mandible at sites where the smokeless tobacco quid was placed. The use of smokeless tobacco was not necessarily associated with severe forms of periodontal disease, and the presence of poor oral hygiene and gingivitis in these users was not related to the development of oral lesions. However, sites adjacent to mucosal lesions in smokeless tobacco users showed significantly greater recession and attachment loss than in sites not adjacent to lesions in users or comparable sites in non-users.
The terms gift and gifting are rarely formally defined, but are associated with something given without receiving payment, often in the expectation of reciprocation and of changing the relationship with the recipient. Extensive prior work across a number of disciplines tends to focus on gifting as a process and shows a broad conceptualization of the gift construct to include actions as diverse as charitable giving, tipping, selfgifting and volunteering, where relationship development and reciprocation are largely irrelevant. As a way to develop the area, two proposals are made: first, that gifting research should recognize two different types of gift, transactional and relational; and second, that the exchange paradigm and its underpinning social exchange theory should become central in developing understanding of relational gifting. The authors argue that empirical researchers may usefully revisit the relational paradigm, but by adopting a more quantitative, modelling approach, and the paper illustrates how this might be achieved.
Objectives
Adapt an established instrument for measuring adolescents’
cigarette-related perceptions for new application with electronic cigarettes
(e-cigarettes).
Methods
In this exploratory study, 104 male high school students (40% tobacco
ever-users) estimated the probability of potential e-cigarette risks (eg, lung cancer)
or benefits (eg, look cool). We calculated associations between risk/benefit composite
scores, ever-use, and use intention for e-cigarettes and analogously for combustible
cigarettes.
Results
E-cigarette ever-use was associated with lower perceived risks, with adjusted
differences versus never-users greater for e-cigarettes than cigarettes. Risk composite
score was inversely associated, and benefit score positively associated, with
e-cigarette ever-use and use intention.
Conclusion
Conditional risk assessment characterized adolescents’ perceived
e-cigarette risk/benefit profile, with potential utility for risk-perception measurement
in larger future studies.
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