33 Leading Health Groups Urge FDA to Stop Tobacco Industry Practices That Have Made Cigarettes More
Friday, March 28, 2014
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
March 28, 2014
CONTACT:
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
Patricia
McLaughlin, Legacy®, 202-454-5560
Gregg
Tubbs, American Lung Association, 202-715-3469
33
Leading Health Groups Urge FDA to Stop Tobacco Industry Practices That Have
Made Cigarettes More Deadly
WASHINGTON,
DC –
Thirty-three leading public health and medical organizations are urging the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration to make it a priority to regulate how
cigarettes are manufactured and stop tobacco industry practices that have made
cigarettes even more deadly and addictive than they were 50 years ago.
In a
letter sent this week to Mitchell Zeller, Director of the FDA’s Center for
Tobacco Products, the health groups urged the FDA to take action in response to
the new Surgeon General’s Report, The Health Consequences of Smoking – 50
Years of Progress, released in January.
The new
report found that, despite smoking fewer cigarettes, smokers today are at far
greater risk of developing lung cancer than they were 50 years ago, when the
first Surgeon General’s Report on Smoking and Health alerted the nation that
smoking causes lung cancer. The new report also concluded that this
outcome is the result of changes made during that time in the design and
composition of U.S. cigarettes.
"No
manufacturer of any other product would have been allowed to make product
changes that increased the risk of fatal disease to its users,” the letter
states. "It is imperative that FDA respond to the Surgeon General’s
Report by moving decisively to exercise its statutory authority to require
cigarette manufacturers to make necessary life-saving changes in the design and
composition of their products.”
A
landmark 2009 law, the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, gave
the FDA the power to regulate tobacco products, including the authority to
require changes in the content and design of cigarettes "appropriate for the
protection of public health.” Before this law, tobacco companies were free to
manufacture and change their products without government oversight.
Among
its key recommendations for accelerating progress in reducing tobacco use, the
new Surgeon General’s report calls for "effective implementation of FDA’s
authority for tobacco product regulation in order to reduce tobacco product
addictiveness and harmfulness.” It also states that "if the risk of lung
cancer has increased with changes in the design and composition of cigarettes,
then the potential exists to reverse that increase in risk through changes in
design and composition.”
According
to the new Surgeon General’s report, "Although the prevalence of smoking has
declined significantly over the past half-century, the risks for
smoking-related disease and mortality have not. In fact, today’s
cigarette smokers – both men and women – have a much higher risk for lung
cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) than smokers in 1964,
despite smoking fewer cigarettes.”
In
addition to its findings that cigarettes are more dangerous today, the new
Surgeon General’s report incorporates the finding of U.S. District Judge Gladys
Kessler in her 2006 civil racketeering judgment against the major U.S.
cigarette manufacturers that the cigarette companies "have designed their
cigarettes to precisely control nicotine delivery levels and provide doses of
nicotine sufficient to create and sustain addiction.”
While
the U.S. has cut smoking rates by more than half since 1964, 18.1 percent of
American adults still smoke and tobacco use remains the nation’s number one
cause of preventable death. Each year, tobacco use kills 480,000 Americans and
costs the nation at least $289 billion in health care bills and other economic
losses, according to the new Surgeon General’s report.
The
groups’ letter concludes: "Over the past 50 years, smoking has killed more than
20 million Americans. We cannot afford to give the tobacco industry another 50
years to make cigarettes even more dangerous and addictive than they are
today.”
The
groups signing the letter: American Academy of Family Physicians, American
Academy of Oral Medicine, American Academy of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck
Surgery, American Academy of Pediatrics, American Association for Cancer
Research, American Association for Respiratory Care, American Cancer Society
Cancer Action Network, American College of Cardiology, American College of
Preventive Medicine, American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists,
American Heart Association, American Lung Association, American Medical
Association, American Psychological Association, American Public Health
Association, American Society of Addiction Medicine, American Society of
Clinical Oncology, American Thoracic Society, Association of State and
Territorial Health Officials, Association of Women's Health, Obstetric and
Neonatal Nurses, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, Cancer Prevention and
Treatment Fund, Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America, Legacy®, Lung Cancer
Alliance, National African American Tobacco Prevention Network, National
Association of County & City Health Officials, National Latino Alliance for
Health Equity, North American Quitline Consortium, Oncology Nursing Society,
Partnership for Prevention, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and
Interventions, and the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco.
Letter to the FDA
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