Gays more likely to smoke; Courtney Love sells e-cigs

It is not entirely news that gays are more likely to smoke than our straight counterparts.

A University of Colorado Cancer Center survey of 1,633 smokers conducted at more than 120 queer-identified venues finds that gays are roughly twice as likely to spark up. Most of the survey respondents were daily smokers, and nearly one-third flicked their Bics almost 20 times a day.

The study concludes that queer adults are much more likely to smoke and much less likely to try to quit.

“We need public health campaigns to get the GLBT smoker population thinking about quitting,” study author Arnold Levinson said in a statement.

The study also set out to determine whether traditional smoking cessation products, such as nicotine gum, appeal to queer smokers.

If an electronic cigarette is something you might want to try, check out this new ad, featuring Courtney Love shilling NJOY.

Read the full study.

Algonquin College journalism grad. Podcaster @qqcpod.

Keep Reading

Inside TransCare+, a new Canadian directory of trans health resources

This new site site aims to be the one-stop shop for Canadian trans healthcare
Two shirtless larger bodies from the waist up, seen from behind; one has their arm around the other.

Bud scars and bodies in queer middle age 

Most people gain weight as they age, a fact with a particular heaviness in body-obsessed gay male culture

What you need need to know about gender-affirming care for youth

What sort of healthcare is available? Do parents have any say? Is the healthcare safe and effective?

Could this week’s Supreme Court abortion pill case affect gender-affirming care?

OPINION: The Comstock Act, a 150-year-old federal obscenity law, has advocates on edge