No smoke without fire

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Almost everyone smoked then

On The Eye our Editor Phil Parry has described how he was helped to break into the South Wales Echo office car, recalled his early career, the importance of experience in the job, making clear that ‘calls’ to emergency services and court cases are central to any media operation, as well as the vital role of the accurate quotation.

He has also explained how poorly paid most journalism is, and the importance of expenses.

You could cut the air with a knife!

Here Mr Parry explores one of the unusual consequences of the First World War and some of the people he has interviewed, as well as how they should be commemorated.

 

 

 

 

 

Major cultural changes are extremely rare, but they do happen.

The First World War is the root cause of one of them – and its ending 100 years ago today, had unforeseen ramifications.

When I started in journalism 35 years ago almost everyone in my newsroom smoked and you could cut the air with a knife.

The reporter opposite me on the paper smoked small cigars, and another always had extremely long cigarettes so he could linger on doorsteps while he smoked them!

This doesn’t happen now…

But now smoking is frowned upon.

It is no longer allowed in pubs or cafes, and you regularly see a gaggle of hardened nicotine addicts outside buildings.

The first question you were asked on my Thomson Regional Newspaper (TRN) training course in Newcastle where I was sent as a cub reporterwas “who here smokes?” and an ash tray was placed with great gravitas on his or her desk.

Our Editor interviewed a man who saved millions of lives

When I was lucky enough to be appointed the presenter of the BBC Wales Television Current Affairs programme, Week In, Week Out (WIWO) I was privileged to interview Sir Richard Doll.

Unfortunately WIWO has now been ditched in favour of ‘BBC Wales Investigates’.

But the programme exposed me to the knowledge that if anyone deserves a statue in towns and cities around the UK it is Sir Richard, because his work saved millions of lives.

HE should be immortalised in stone, rather than erecting statues of men on horses!

Sir Richard was an epidemiologist and the team he led discovered the link between smoking and lung cancer.

He explained to me how they could not work out why there was a sudden spike in lung cancer deaths in the 1920s, and they pursued a number of different avenues, before all of them proved dead ends.

Among the possible causes, as they thought, was that the growth in lung cancer was because it was linked to the process of putting down new road surfaces – which was happening a lot in the 1920s.

But eventually they worked out it was not this.

There should be statues of Sir Richard Doll in high streets not men on horses

In the end they established that the cause of the growth in lung cancer was because of the First World War.

At the beginning, in 1914, ordinary soldiers were recruited who smoked clay pipes.

These, though, were far more susceptible to being seen by eagle-eyed enemy snipers when they were in the trenches, so the soldiers quickly switched to cigarettes which were easier to hide and extinguish.

When the war finally finished on this day in 1918 the demobbed soldiers brought their cigarette habit home and it quickly became de rigueur to smoke cigarettes, which are, of course, far more effective in delivering carcinogenic smoke into the lungs than clay pipes.

Cigarettes were easier to hide

So that, Sir Richard explained, was behind the sudden upsurge in lung cancer cases in the 1920s and he went on to write several books trying to publicise his work.

But even though the link between cigarettes and lung cancer was known about early in the 20th century, it would be decades before action was taken.

A smoking ban in England, making it illegal to smoke in all enclosed work places, only came into force on July 1 2007 as a consequence of the Health Act of 2006.

Similar bans had already been introduced by politicians in the rest of the United Kingdom – in Scotland on March 26 2006, Wales on April 2 2007 and Northern Ireland on April 30 2007.

Smoking is by far the biggest preventable cause of cancer.

Sir Richard Doll tried to publicise his work

It accounts for more than 1 in 4 UK cancer deaths, and 3 in 20 cancer cases.

Last year it was reported that major US tobacco companies were to publish and broadcast messages that clearly stated they designed their products to be more addictive, even while knowing their health effects were deadly.

So Sir Richard has been responsible for saving more lives than anyone else.

His name should be known more widely and his work should be celebrated everywhere.

Now everyone knows the truth of what this does

If nothing else he is the reason why you can see properly now in newsrooms.

And the First World War of course!

Tomorrow – our satirical writer explains why Welsh Labour did not answer our question about a rift at the top of the party. 

Check your knowledge of today’s events as revealed over the last few months on The Eye, with our brilliant interactive quiz: [viralQuiz id=1]

 

 

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