Fantastic response to our X-HALE Training for Youth Workers this year, so far 64 youth workers have attended our FREE one day sessions across Kilkenny, Cork, Limerick, Galway and Dublin... well done...

seen from Spain
seen from Colombia
seen from Colombia
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from Canada

seen from Maldives
seen from Mexico

seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from Canada
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
Fantastic response to our X-HALE Training for Youth Workers this year, so far 64 youth workers have attended our FREE one day sessions across Kilkenny, Cork, Limerick, Galway and Dublin... well done...
X-HALE is an Irish Cancer Society initiative that aims to prevent young people from smoking through educating and empowering young people, youth leaders and ...
In celebration of our X-HALE 2018 launch, we’re proud to share our BRAND NEW documentary showcasing the impact of X-HALE over the years... “X-HALE A Tobacco Free Generation in the Making” !
Thank you to the young people and youth workers that shared their experiences of taking part, we hope their stories will inspire youth groups across Ireland to get involved in X-HALE 2018! We’ve made fantastic progress by working together so far, let’s keep driving the movement towards Irelands First Tobacco Free Generation! Find out about X-HALE 2018 training and grant opportunities at www.cancer.ie/xhale
Invitation to Youth Worker Forum: Next Steps on the Road to a Tobacco Free Generation THE IRISH CANCER SOCIETY, supported by the National Youth Council of Ireland with funding from the HSE, are bringing youth and community workers together for a discussion and planning forum to THINK BIG about engaging and supporting young people and youth organisations in working towards a tobacco free generation....
Congratulations to our joint runner up of the X-HALE SpunOut.ie Article Competition, Méabh O’Gorman from St. Bridget’s Girl Guides Clonmel. Check our her blog about her experience of taking part in X-HALE. Well done Méabh !
St. Bridget’s Girl Guides is one of forty youth groups across twenty counties that have been hard at work over the last few months making and promoting youth-led short films to encourage young people not to smoke as part of X-HALE 2017. The entry with the most views will take home the Online Award at the X-HALE Youth Awards on July 6th, so show your support for Ireland’s first smoke free generation by checking out the entries at www.cancer.ie/xhale2017 and sharing your favourite with your friends!
My name is Méabh O’Gorman and I am a member of St. Bridget’s Girl Guides and we are based in Clonmel County Tipperary.
We have been involved in the X-HALE project for the past two years and I can honestly say that I think it benefited not only me but everyone in St. Bridget’s Guides. From coming up with ideas for the movies to writing the script, performing in it and filming it.
I wanted to get involved in X-HALE to raise awareness of what smoking does to not only the smoker but to everyone around them. If anything happened to a young smoker as a result of smoking, it would devastate their family, their friends and the community.
As part of X-HALE my group wrote and acted in two plays called The Walking Dead and The Recruit. It was an amazing experience and I hope that we will take part again next year. I was only involved in The Recruit and it was a wonderful experience and the other girls that took part in The Smoking Dead told me that it was just as cool. We all had so much fun writing and putting together the script. We sat in a big circle and threw around some ideas. Filming the movie was just as much fun. It was a very long day but it was so worth it, the end result was fantastic!
Through X-HALE my group and I learned so much about smoking and what it can do to you. We learned about the effects of smoking on the body, like the yellowish tint in the skin and the shortness of breath. We also learned about how giving up smoking can help your body go back to normal, like your blood pressure returning to normal and being able to taste and smell normally again. And about how a child growing up in a house with a smoker increases the child’s chances of becoming a smoker themselves. We also touched on how peer pressure can influence a child or young adult into becoming a smoker. Also, how a parent’s smoking can affect a child’s health through passive smoking.
Through X-HALE we learned how to say no to a cigarette and how smoking can have implications on your physical health and how you live your life, because of your dependence on nicotine.
I think X-HALE positively affected not just me but my whole group by giving us the knowledge and the skills early on to help us make the right informed decisions about smoking.
Thank you for taking the time to read my article!
Congratulations to our joint runner up of the X-HALE SpunOut.ie Article Competition, Philip Shestialtynov from Blanchardstown Community Training Centre. Check out his blog that explains his experience of taking part in X-HALE. Well done Philip!
Blanchardstown CTC is one of forty youth groups across twenty counties that have been hard at work over the last few months making and promoting youth-led short films to encourage young people not to smoke as part of X-HALE 2017. The entry with the most views will take home the Online Award at the X-HALE Youth Awards on July 6th, so show your support for Ireland’s first smoke free generation by checking out the entries at www.cancer.ie/xhale2017 and sharing your favourite with your friends!
Hello, my name is Philip Shestialtynov (I know, it’s quite the mouthful!). I worked on “I Told You So” (Senior), Blanchardstown Community Training Centre’s X-HALE film submission, along with the rest of our very own Digital Media class. It has been something of a tradition for the BCTC to submit a clip to the fine folks at the Irish Cancer Society for the last three years now, and hopefully, counting!
Perhaps it’s out of a sense of tribalism, but the main reason that I personally wanted to get involved in this year’s film-making was to see BCTC get its name out there. I feel this is important as we are a relatively young community training centre, having only officially opened in 2012, and the last in a long line of CTCs to do so. There’s probably no better way to achieve this than through trying to spread a message that’s positive for everyone. Well, except maybe for Marlboro.
Speaking of positivity, there was nothing but that during the actual process of creating our submission. I think we placed an especially noteworthy amount of effort into ensuring a high quality of cinematography (or maybe that’s the tribalism coming through again!), and it was entertaining to see a drone flying around while doing some of the outdoor scenes to say the least. My main role was to create fake blood, however I, like many others in our class, played many parts during production. I held the boom pole for the microphone, worked as a cameraman, and supervised storyboard writing and editing of footage. On that last point, there was a noticeable chunk of footage that we couldn’t squeeze in due to the time constraints presented. We could have almost made two films! Overall, the opportunity to work on this project greatly improved my general film-making skills, and this experience will prove valuable to any future endeavours of this sort that I might wish to partake in. And of course, I learned how to make some pretty tasty fake blood.
Admittedly, I didn’t see many new facts about smoking. However, one did grab my attention that I hadn’t previously seen. Only about 1 in 10 young Irish people smoke. I think that these two observations taken together are very important to the goal of the X-Hale competition. That is, the creation of a smoke-free generation in Ireland. Not seeing any new facts about how terrible smoking is for your health means that the organisations trying to spread information about this exact topic are succeeding, and clearly, these efforts are doing their job when viewed through the perspective of the 1 in 10 statistic. I now believe that it is a genuine possibility for the next generation to be rid of tobacco’s influence, viewing it only as a historical oddity in a few decades from now.
I wish everybody the best of luck in the awards ceremony on the 6th of July, and hopefully next year’s submissions from everyone will be just as good.
Isabel Read discusses X-HALE in her winning blog
Congratulations to our winner of the X-HALE SpunOut.ie Article Competition, Isabel Read from Naas No Name Club. Check out her winning blog on SpunOut.ie that explains her experience of taking part in X-HALE and the effect it had on her and her group. Well done Isabel!
Nass No Name Club is one of forty youth groups across twenty counties that have been hard at work over the last few months making and promoting youth-led short films to encourage young people not to smoke as part of X-HALE 2017. The entry with the most views will take home the Online Award at the X-HALE Youth Awards on July 6th, so show your support for Ireland’s first smoke free generation by checking out the entries at www.cancer.ie/xhale2017 and sharing your favourite with your friends!
The @irishcancersociety are proud to present... the #xhale2017 playlist! Congratulations to the 40 youth groups from across Ireland that have spent the last few months learning about the harms of tobacco and making their films to encourage young people to be smoke free... the result is worth watching so please watch and SHARE, SHARE, SHARE to support #TheXGeneration, Ireland's First Tobacco Free Generation! www.cancer.ie/xhale2017
X-HALE 2017 SpunOut.ie Article Competition
Calling all X-HALE participants! The X-HALE SpunOut.ie Article Competition is back for 2017!
Would you like to be a published writer on Ireland’s national youth information website, SpunOut.ie?
We are inviting young people that are currently taking part in X-HALE 2017 to write an article to share their experience of taking part in X-HALE.
One lucky bloggers article will be featured on SpunOut.ie and the Irish Cancer Society will select additional articles to be shared on our X-HALE Facebook page and Tumblr blog. Don’t miss out on this opportunity to promote your film to over 100,000 SpunOut.ie readers during the online competition!
This is your chance to inspire and inform young people across the country with your X-HALE 2017 story! Be the voice of the #TheXGeneration, Ireland’s first smoke free generation! In 500 words or less, we want to hear about:
· Who you are and the name of the group you are from
· Why you wanted to get involved in X-HALE
· What you did as part of your X-HALE participation
· Your experience of taking part
· What you learned about smoking throughout the process
· What skills you gained by taking part
· How your participation in X-HALE 2017 affected you, your group, your centre and your community
Closing date for typed submissions, 500 words or less, with a picture to accompany the article to [email protected] is Friday 16th June