Houston home journal. (Perry, GA) 2007-current, December 29, 2007, Page 28, Image 50

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: F MzEfJm Mm Kicking the habit will improve your health and your social life. MAKE SMOKE-FREE « 11 JANUARY GETS ITS name from the Roman god Janus, a fellow who had two faces I one looking backward and the other looking forward. Such a name I makes sense; we reflect on the past year while looking to the future dur ing this month. And that makes Janu ary the perfect time for making reso- lutions. For the approximately one in five adults who smoke, vowing to kick the habit should be at the top of the list. For a while, it looked like we had smoking on the run. According to the Centers for Disease Control, the percentage of adult smokers fell each year from 1997 to 2004, but then it leveled off. The most re cent CDC figures (from 2006) suggest that we still have about the same percentage of adult cigarette smokers (20.8%) as in 2004. This recent stall is a concern. Smoking continues to be the most signifi cant modifiable cause of illness and death among us, Smoking continues to be the biggest cause of illness and death among us that we can change. problems smoking causes for the heart and lungs, but consider what it does to other areas of your life, as wefi. And think about the upside of a smoke-free life. Cheek out what the data show (see box). These research observations are not meant to be little, but rather to inspire. A smoke-free life brings with it much more than just better health; it also 28 USA WEEKEND • Dec. 28-30,2007 By DR. TEDD MITCHELL so reversing this trend once again is critical to our nation’s health. Here’s where the New Tear’s resolution comes in. Those of you who smoke should take this oppor tunity to reflect on rea sons to kick the habit. We’ve all heard about the A NON-SMOKING WIN LIST: 1. Your appeal to the opposite sex could triple. 2. You could improve your sexual function. 3. Your wrinkles may appear smoother, and your face may age better than a smoker's. 4. Others are more likely to perceive you as more sophisticated than smokers. 5. Others will tend to view you as more self-disciplined than smokers. 6. Others are more likely to consider you wiser than smokers. 7. Others will tend to think you are more desirable to date than smokers. 8. Even smokers tend to view non-smokers more positively than they view themselves. brings a better social life. We live at a time when cigarettes’ detrimental ef fects have been well documented and highly dissemi nated. I would venture to say that nobody living in the United States would argue that cigarettes are good for you. That’s how far we’ve come over the past half-century. But we appeal- to have hit a snag. Let’s use January 2008 to turn things around. I hope that when we look back in January 2009, we’ll see smoking rates on the decline once more. Tedi> Mitchell, M.D., president of Dallas' Cooper Clinic, writes Health Smart every iveek. : >." v ■- . , ' ■ ' Dads help ADHD kids A sports program keeps fathers involved and learning to give positive feedback. BY PEGGY J. NOONAN Traditional treatment programs teach par ents how to cope with their kids’ attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder but, unfortunately, dads tend to drop out or not show up at all. Adding sports to the mix gets fathers involved and helps children and dads cope better, a study at the State University of New York at Buf falo found. In an eight-week program, ADHD kids ages 6 to 12 play soccer and learn the game’s rules and techniques as well as good sportsmanship. At the same time, dads at tend classes in which they learn effective coping strategies for ADHD challenges. One impor tant lesson: how to minimize negative criticisms, “pay atten tion to their child’s good be havior and praise them when they do things the right way,” says Gregory A Fabiano, PhJ}, who developed the program known as COACHES (Coach ing Our Acting-Out Children: Heightening Essential Skills) with funding from the National Institute of Mental Health. After each lesson, dads and kids get together to play a real soccer game. It’s “set up to be just like a real little league,” Fabi ano says. “The dads’ job is to coach the kids” using tech niques that they have learned in class. For example, at least five times per quarter, dads are to “catch their kids being good and notice their appropriate behavior.... And, of course, the goal is that they do those same things with the child at home during the week.” While kids are having fun playing, their negative ADHD behaviors are reduced, so it’s easier for dads to see posi tive results right away. Fathers play key roles in children’s development, es pecially, Fabiano says, when it comes to helping children figure out the best ways to interact socially with other kids their age. ca X n If ADHD KEYS FOR PARENTS • Reward kids for being good, • Establish clear rules and consequences. • Be consistent. OAVO P. HALL MASTIRHtt