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- The Tragic Story Behind CDCs Most Recognized Anti-Smoking Ad | The . . .
After 23 years of smoking cigarettes, Terrie Hall was faced with multiple health issues She was diagnosed with cancer multiple times, and forced to remove her larynx voicebox through a
- Terrie H. ’s Story | Real Stories | Tips From Former Smokers | CDC
When Terrie was a child, doctors first linked smoking with cancer As a teen, Terrie started smoking As she grew older, smoking was linked to more and more diseases At age 40, Terrie got cancer In this TV ad, photos of Terrie put a human face on the millions killed by smoking
- Antismoking Champion Terrie Hall Dies | Real Stories | Tips From Former . . .
Antismoking champion Terrie Hall, 53, died on Monday, September 16, 2013, from the cancer she fought so bravely during the final 13 years of her life She wanted young people to know the truth about tobacco, and shared her story as one of the people featured in CDC's Tips From Former Smokers (Tips) national advertising campaign
- Terrie Hall - Wikipedia
She was well known for starring in one of the ads of CDC's smoking ad campaign, as well as traveling across America to educate youth and adults about the consequences of tobacco use [3] By her 11th cancer diagnosis, Hall died at the age of 53
- Woman in graphic anti-smoking ad dies from cancer - CBS News
Terrie Hall died at a hospital in Winston-Salem, N C , federal officials said She was 53 "She was a public health hero," said Dr Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and
- Graphic anti-smoking ads helped 100,000 kick the habit for good, CDC says
One of the most striking ads featured Terrie Hall, a 52-year-old North Carolina woman who suffered throat cancer caused by smoking “The only voice my grandson has ever heard is this one,” the
- Terrie Hall, Star Of CDC’s Anti-Smoking Ads, Dies At 53: ‘She Was A . . .
Terrie Hall, who spoke with the help of an artificial voice box in anti-smoking television advertisements commissioned by the U S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), died from cancer-related complications on Monday in Winston-Salem, N C
- Graphic Ads Motivate Smokers to Quit - The New York Times
Then she saw a graphic television commercial featuring a former smoker, Terri Hall, who developed head and neck cancer The widely seen advertisement shows Ms Hall inserting a set of false
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