| The Tobacco Reference Guide
|
| by David Moyer, MD. |
| Chapter 17 Smokeless Tobacco |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour |
| Smokeless Tobacco: Baseball and Smokeless Tobacco |
| globalink (artefact pour saut de ligne) |
| Major League baseball teams once supplied free chewing tobacco to their players. |
| During the 1980's, an industry marketing campaign delivered free samples to team |
| clubhouses. |
| American Journal of Public Health 82:351, 1992 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Hall of Fame baseball player Rod Carew chewed tobacco from 1964 until he quit in |
| 1992, when he had a growth in his mouth and spent more than $100,000 on remedial |
| dental work. |
| San Francisco Chronicle, February 4, 1993 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| "Giants fans have reverently followed Barry Bonds' uncanny feats this season, and the |
| same fans have also watched Bonds repeatedly return to the bench and pull out a big |
| ol' wad of chewing tobacco. Baseball's best player, its most-watched role model, |
| enjoys a good chew. He's not alone." |
| San Francisco Chronicle, August 18, 1993 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Barry Bonds quit his smokeless tobacco habit in 1997. |
| San Francisco Chronicle, May 13, 1997 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| During one game of the 1986 World Series, there were a total of 24 minutes on |
| camera of televised images of players and coaches chewing and dipping smokeless |
| tobacco. |
| NEJM, April 9, 1987, p. 952 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Page 2 of 30 |
| globalink (artefact pour saut de ligne) |
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