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Read the press release here.

Health Department Tries to Stub Out Cigarettes with New Anti-Smoking Campaign

By Test Reporter | March 11, 2010 4:38pm | Updated on March 11, 2010 4:35pm

By Olivia Scheck

DNAinfo Reporter/Producer

MANHATTAN — Of New York’s nearly 1 million cigarette smokers, almost 7,500 die from smoking-related illnesses each year, according to a new  anti-smoking campaign by the city Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.

The “Reverse the Damage” campaign seeks to educate New Yorkers about the health benefits of giving up smoking by sharing little-known facts to encourage quitting.

Graphic advertisements showing the dangers of tobacco will appear in the subway and on bus shelters, as well as on television and radio, the Associated Press reported.

One of the campaign’s commercials, which features a dramatic montage of open-heart surgeries, states that a smoker's risk of heart disease is cut in half one year after quitting.

The city Department of Health recently launched an anti-smoking campaign aimed at New York's nearly 1 million smokers. (Wikimedia Commons)
The city Department of Health recently launched an anti-smoking campaign aimed at New York's nearly 1 million smokers. (Wikimedia Commons)
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Smokers swayed by the ads can also take advantage of the city's annual 16-day Nicotine Patch and Gum Giveaway, which will continue through March 25.  Visit nyc.gov/nyquits or call 311 for details.