Fifteen Years after Tobacco Settlement, Report Finds Most States Continue to Shortchange Prevention
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
The
full report and state-specific information are available at www.tobaccofreekids.org/reports/settlements
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE: December 9, 2013
CONTACTS:
Peter
Hamm, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, 202-296-5469
Lauren
Walens, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, 202-661-5763
Retha
Sherrod, American Heart Association, 202-785-7929
Gregg
Tubbs, American Lung Association, 202-715-3469
Christine
Clayton, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 609-627-5937
Fifteen
Years after Tobacco Settlement, Report Finds Most States Continue to Shortchange
Prevention Programs
Effective
Programs Save Lives and Health Care Dollars
WASHINGTON,
DC
– Fifteen years after reaching more than $246 billion in legal settlements
against the tobacco industry, most states have broken their promise to spend a
significant portion of the money on programs to prevent kids from smoking and
help smokers quit, according to a report
released today by a coalition of public health organizations.
States
are being "penny-wise and pound-foolish” in shortchanging tobacco prevention
and cessation program despite conclusive evidence that these programs reduce
smoking, save lives and save money, the report concludes. Tobacco use is
the number one cause of preventable death in the United States, killing more
than 400,000 Americans and costing the nation $96 billion in health care bills
each year.
Key
findings of the report include:
- Over
the past 15 years, the states have received $390.8 billion in tobacco-generated
revenue – $116.3 billion from the tobacco settlement and $274.5 billion from
tobacco taxes. But they have spent only 2.3 percent of their tobacco
money – $8.9 billion – on tobacco prevention programs.
- This
year (fiscal year 2014), the states will collect $25 billion in tobacco
revenues, but will spend only 1.9 percent of it – $481.2 million – on tobacco
prevention programs. While this year’s funding is a slight increase from
a year ago, it fails to restore deep cuts that have reduced tobacco prevention
funding by a third since 2008.
- The
states currently provide just 13 percent of the tobacco prevention funding
recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Only two
states – North Dakota and Alaska – are funding tobacco prevention programs at
the CDC-recommended level. Only four other states – Delaware, Wyoming, Hawaii
and Oklahoma – provide even half the recommended funding. Find
out how each state ranks.
- Tobacco
companies spend more than $18 to market tobacco products for every one dollar
the states spend to reduce tobacco use. According to the latest data from
the Federal Trade Commission (for 2011), tobacco companies spend $8.8 billion a
year – one million dollars each hour – to market cigarettes and smokeless
tobacco.
The
report, titled "Broken Promises to Our Children: The 1998 State Tobacco
Settlement 15 Years Later,” was released by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids,
American Heart Association, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network,
American Lung Association, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and Americans for
Nonsmokers’ Rights.
The
report details the ever-growing scientific evidence that tobacco prevention and
cessation programs work. Florida, which has a well-funded, sustained
program, recently reported that its high school smoking rate fell to just 8.6
percent in 2013, far below the national rate. Studies have also found
that tobacco prevention programs deliver a strong return on investment. A
2011 study in the American Journal of Public Health found that
Washington state saved more than $5 in tobacco-related hospitalization costs
for every $1 spent during the first 10 years of its program.
"It
is public health malpractice that the states are spending so little on tobacco
prevention programs despite having so much evidence that these programs work to
save lives and save money,” said Matthew L. Myers, President of the Campaign
for Tobacco-Free Kids. "To win the fight against tobacco, elected
officials at all levels must step up efforts to implement proven solutions,
including well-funded tobacco prevention programs.”
This
report comes as the nation nears the 50th anniversary of the first
Surgeon General’s report on smoking and health, which was released on January
11, 1964. In recent decades, the U.S. has cut smoking rates in half, but
around 18 percent of Americans still smoke and smoking declines have slowed in
recent years.
To
accelerate declines in tobacco use – and ultimately eliminate the death and
disease it causes – the report calls for bold action by the states and the
federal government:
- The
states should increase funding for tobacco prevention programs to CDC-recommended
levels, raise tobacco taxes and enact comprehensive smoke-free laws.
- At
the federal level, the Food and Drug Administration must fully and effectively
exercise its authority under a 2009 law to regulate the manufacturing,
marketing and sale of tobacco products. The CDC should continue and
expand its media campaign, called Tips from Former Smokers, that has proven
highly effective at encouraging smokers to quit. The federal tobacco tax
should be significantly increased, as President Obama recommended earlier this
year. The Obama Administration must also aggressively implement
provisions of the Affordable Care Act that require insurance coverage for
smoking cessation therapies.
"It’s
inexcusable that states are spending less than two cents of every dollar they
receive in settlement funds and tobacco taxes on cessation programs that are
proven to help people quit, and ultimately better the health of its residents,”
said John R. Seffrin, PhD, chief executive officer, American Cancer Society Cancer
Action Network, the advocacy affiliate of the American Cancer Society.
"Evidence shows what works in tobacco control: comprehensive smoke-free laws,
significant, consistent increases in tobacco taxes and fully-funded tobacco
prevention and cessation programs.”
"This
report is a wake-up call to state lawmakers,” said Nancy Brown, CEO of the
American Heart Association. "It is simply unacceptable that such a tiny
fraction of tobacco revenue is used for tobacco prevention and cessation
programs. With sufficient funding, these programs save lives and money.
Moving forward, the American Heart Association will continue to push for full
funding of these programs in all states."
"States
have had 15 years to make meaningful investments in proven programs that
prevent youth from starting to smoke and to help smokers quit but tragically,
almost all have failed,” said Harold Wimmer, National President and CEO of the
American Lung Association. "State policymakers must begin to fund these
proven programs in order to ensure another generation’s lives are not put at
risk for devastating lung and other tobacco-related diseases.”
The
full report and state-specific information are available at www.tobaccofreekids.org/reports/settlements.
Source: Meg Riordan, Director, Policy
Research, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids
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