American Lung Association Statement on Surgeon General's Report
Thursday, March 8, 2012
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE:
Contact: Mary Havell
March 8,
2012
202-715-3459
mary.havell@lung.org
States Can Cut
Youth Tobacco Use in Half in Six Years
American Lung
Association Urges States to Heed Surgeon General’s
Recommendations
WASHINGTON–
Preventing Tobacco Use Among Youth
and Young Adults, the new report released today by U.S. Surgeon
General Regina Benjamin, sends a powerful message: the failure of states to
invest in proven policies and programs has resulted in 3 million new youth and
young adult smokers, a third of whom will ultimately die from their addiction.
The report also concludes that if states begin to invest in comprehensive
programs today, youth tobacco use can be cut in half in just six years.
"This report
underscores the critical importance of preventing tobacco use among youth and
young adults,” said Charles D. Connor, President and CEO of the American Lung
Association. "This is a wakeup call to all policymakers and community leaders
that tobacco addiction is a vicious and deadly cycle that can and must come to
an end.”
Youth tobacco
use was last reported on by the U.S. Surgeon General in 1994. This 31st Report
finds that immediate health consequences occur in young adults much earlier than
previously reported. When young people smoke, they cause early and permanent
damage to their lungs – potentially stunting the growth of their lungs and
increasing their risk for developing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD), the third leading cause of death in the US.
Much
like the first Surgeon General’s Report on smoking issued 48 years ago, this
report provides powerful scientific evidence that action is needed to reduce the
number one cause of preventable disease in the US. Unlike that 1964 Surgeon
General’s report, however, today’s report is clear on what steps must be taken
to reduce tobacco use in the US.
Evidence
is Clear: States are Failing to Invest in Proven Tobacco Prevention
Programs
According to the
report, more than 600,000 middle school and 3 million high school students
smoke. Much of this can be attributed to the failure of states to maintain
investments and funding of comprehensive prevention and cessation programs that
were in place between 1997 and 2003.
In January, the
Lung Association released its annual State of Tobacco
Control report which found that virtually every state is failing to
fund tobacco control programs at levels recommended by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC). In Fiscal Year 2012, states spent $477.1 million
– only 12.9 percent out of the $3.7 billion the CDC recommends states invest in
tobacco prevention programs. In addition, states spent only 1.86 percent on
tobacco control and prevention of the $25.6 billion they received from state
cigarette excise taxes and tobacco Master Settlement Agreement payments.
Comprehensive
tobacco programs also save states money. A recent study showed that Washington
State saved $5 in tobacco-related hospitalization costs for every $1 it spent on
tobacco prevention program from 2000-2009.
Ruthless Tobacco
Industry Continues to Prey on Youth
At the same time
states are cutting back, the Surgeon General found that the tobacco industry is
finding new ways to target kids through marketing and price promotions that
reduce the cost of key products targeting youth consumers.
"It is
astonishing that every hour of every day, the tobacco industry spends another $1
million on marketing,” said Connor. "As we all know, the majority of teens and
young adults are impressionable and susceptible to marketing campaigns and price
promotions.”
"Sadly this
report finds that for every smoker who dies each day from tobacco-related
disease, they are replaced by two new, younger smokers. But there is good news:
evidence shows that if we work together to implement comprehensive,
science-based tobacco prevention and cessation policies, we can intervene and
protect America’s youth and young adults from tobacco’s deadly addiction,” said
Connor.
Mass media
campaigns are one of the most effective ways tobacco use can be reduced. These
campaigns have the effect of prompting smokers to quit and discouraging youth
from starting. The report finds these campaigns are even more effective when
linked to other proven changes, including smokefree laws and increases in
tobacco taxes.
This summer the
American Lung Association will be releasing a report, as part of its Disparities
in Lung Health Series, that will examine the prevalence of
tobacco addiction and exposure to secondhand smoke among youth and adults in
rural America.
The Lung
Association has been successfully helping smokers quit for more than 30 years
with our Freedom From Smoking
program. In addition, the Lung Association’s Not-On-Tobacco®
(N-O-T)
program
is
designed for smokers aged 14 to 19 who want to quit and is America’s most
popular smoking cessation program for teens. For assistance with quitting
smoking or for additional questions about lung health, please call the American
Lung Association’s Lung HelpLine at 1-800-548-8252.
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About the
American Lung Association Now in its
second century, the American Lung Association is the leading organization
working to save lives by improving lung health and preventing lung disease. With
your generous support, the American Lung Association is "Fighting for Air”
through research, education and advocacy. For more information about the
American Lung Association, a Charity Navigator Four Star Charity and holder of
the Better Business Bureau Wise Giving Guide Seal, or to support the work it
does, call 1-800-LUNG-USA (1-800-586-4872) or visit www.Lung.org.
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