Surgeon General's Report Shows Tobacco Industry is Still Addicting Kids
Thursday, March 8, 2012
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
TFK release on the Surgeon General’s
report is below. http://www.cdc.gov/Features/YouthTobaccoUse/.
We also encourage you to check out the CDC webpage which
has links to additional materials, including a consumer-friendly booklet in
addition to the full report. http://www.cdc.gov/Features/YouthTobaccoUse/
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 8,
2012
CONTACT: Marie Cocco,
202-296-5469
Surgeon General’s Report Shows
Tobacco Industry Is Still Addicting Kids
Elected Officials
Must Step Up Fight to Protect Our Children
Statement of Matthew L.
Myers
President, Campaign for Tobacco-Free
Kids
WASHINGTON, DC – The U.S. Surgeon General’s report
released today makes two things perfectly clear: The tobacco industry’s
marketing is still addicting America’s kids, and elected officials – especially
in the states – need to do more to protect our children from the scourge of
tobacco.
While
the nation has made tremendous progress in reducing smoking, this report is a
stark warning that the battle against tobacco must be a national priority. It
finds that tobacco use remains a "pediatric epidemic” that afflicts millions of
children, immediately harming their health and putting them on a path to
debilitating disease and premature death. It is unacceptable that 18 years
after the first Surgeon General’s report on youth smoking, more than 3.6 million
middle and high school students still smoke – and another 1.4 million try their
first cigarette each year – when we have cost-effective, evidence-based
solutions to prevent them from doing so.
The
report, Preventing Tobacco Use Among Youth
and Young Adults, reaches two especially troubling
conclusions:
·
Despite reductions in smoking, more young
people still become regular smokers every year than the 443,000 Americans who
die from tobacco use. In fact, for every tobacco-related death, at least two
youths or young adults become new regular smokers, and nearly 90 percent of
these "replacement smokers” try their first cigarette by age 18. We cannot win
the fight against tobacco – the nation’s number one cause of preventable death –
unless we stop the tobacco industry from recruiting this new generation of
smokers.
·
Cigarette smoking immediately and permanently
harms the health of kids and young adults. Smoking quickly causes nicotine
addiction, cardiovascular damage, slower lung growth and shortness of
breath.
Today’s report also leaves no doubt that there are
proven strategies to reduce tobacco use: mass media campaigns that vividly
demonstrate the dangers of smoking, increasing the price of cigarettes through
higher tobacco taxes, comprehensive prevention programs, smoke-free air laws,
and restrictions on tobacco marketing. This report MUST spur a renewed
commitment by all levels of government to implement these proven
strategies.
Policy Makers Must Act to Protect
Kids
The
Obama Administration has provided much-needed national leadership in this fight,
including enactment of the landmark law granting the Food and Drug
Administration authority over tobacco products, a 61-cent increase in the
federal cigarette tax, and increased support for tobacco prevention and
cessation programs. But the tobacco industry has gone to court to block key
measures, including marketing restrictions and graphic cigarette warnings
required by the FDA law.
Unfortunately, the states have been going backwards. In
the past four years, the states have cut funding for tobacco prevention
programs, including mass media campaigns, by 36 percent ($260.5 million).
States are spending less than two percent of the revenue they collect from the
tobacco settlement and tobacco taxes on these life-saving programs. Recent
studies show that these programs not only reduce smoking and save lives, but
also save money by reducing tobacco-related health care costs. One study showed
that in the first 10 years of its program, Washington state saved $5 in
hospitalization costs alone for every $1 spent.
State
progress has also slowed in enacting tobacco tax increases and smoke-free laws
as the tobacco industry and its allies have stepped up their opposition to such
measures, even seeking to roll them back.
Tobacco Marketing Is Still Addicting
Kids
The
Surgeon General’s report provides a powerful reminder that the tobacco industry
is the main cause of the tobacco epidemic. It concludes definitively that
tobacco marketing causes kids to start and continue using tobacco products,
finding that the scientific evidence "consistently and coherently points to the
intentional marketing of tobacco products to youth as being a cause of young
people’s tobacco use.”
While
legal settlements and laws have curtailed some of their marketing, the tobacco
companies still spend $10.5 billion a year – nearly $29 million each day – to
market cigarettes and smokeless tobacco products, according to the latest data
from the Federal Trade Commission. Tobacco marketing expenditures increased by
52 percent between 1998 and 2008 despite restrictions imposed by the 1998 legal
settlement between the states and the tobacco
companies.
Tobacco companies are undermining and circumventing
restrictions on their marketing and continue to make their products appealing,
accessible and affordable to kids. For example:
·
Tobacco marketing today is concentrated in
convenience stores and other retail outlets, where tobacco companies spend
billions to ensure their products are heavily advertised, displayed prominently
and priced cheaply. Two-thirds of teenagers visit convenience stores at least
once a week, and studies have found that price discounts and exposure to tobacco
marketing in stores increase youth smoking. (For more information about store
marketing, including a slideshow, visit our recent report at http://tfk.org/deadlyalliance).
·
Marketing for smokeless tobacco has
skyrocketed by 277 percent since the 1998 settlement, Tobacco companies have
introduced an array of colorfully-packaged and sweetly-flavored smokeless
tobacco products, including new products that look and dissolve like
mints.
·
Tobacco companies also have introduced a
variety of smaller cigars, called little cigars or cigarillos, with sweet
flavors such as grape and strawberry, colorful packaging and cheap prices that
make them appealing to kids.
Today’s report makes clear that the tobacco companies
are as aggressive as ever in marketing their deadly products, and they continue
to bombard our kids with messages and images encouraging them to smoke and use
other tobacco products. Policy makers at all levels MUST take equally
aggressive action to protect our children. It’s time to side with America’s
kids, not the tobacco industry.
|