CDC Press Release: Calls to quitline hit record high after CDC national tobacco ad campaign launch
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
Press Release Immediate
Release Monday, April 2,
2012 Contact: CDC Office of
Smoking & Health (770) 488-5493
Calls to quitline hit record high
after CDC national tobacco ad campaign launch
Tips from Former Smokers campaign
shows real lives and bodies damaged by tobacco
Two weeks after the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention launched the Tips from Former Smokers campaign, calls to the
1-800-QUIT-NOW quitline have more than doubled.
Call volume rose from 14,437 calls for the period
Monday, March 12 – Sunday, March 18, to 33,262 calls for the period Monday,
March 19 – Sunday, March 25, and a record 34,413 calls for the period Monday,
March 26 – Sunday, April 1, the CDC reported. The ads were launched March 19,
and will run for at least 12 weeks on television, radio, and billboards, online,
and in theaters, magazines, and newspapers
nationwide.
Previous experience from state and local media campaigns
promoting quitlines shows at least five to six smokers try to quit on their own
for every one person who calls a quitline.
The campaign features compelling stories of former
smokers living with smoking-related diseases and disabilities, and the toll
smoking-related illnesses take on smokers and their loved ones. The ads focus on
smoking-related lung and throat cancer, heart attack, stroke, asthma, and
Buerger’s disease, a rare condition affecting arm and leg arteries and veins.
The campaign features suggestions from former smokers on how to get dressed when
you have a stoma (a surgical opening in the neck) or artificial limbs, what
scars from heart surgery look like, and reasons why people have quit. The ads
are tagged with 1-800-QUIT-NOW, a toll-free number to access quit support across
the country, or the www.smokefree.gov website, which provides
free quitting information. A three-fold increase in total visits to the website
was observed in the first week of the campaign.
"Although they may be tough to watch, the ads show
people living with real, painful consequences from smoking,” said CDC Director
Thomas R. Frieden, M.D., M.P.H. "For every one person who dies from tobacco,
twenty are disabled or disfigured or have a disease that is unpleasant, painful,
expensive. There is sound evidence that supports these ads – and, based on the
increase in calls to 1-800-QUIT-NOW, we’re on our way to helping more smokers
quit.”
The Tips from Former Smokers campaign is another bold
step in the Obama administration’s commitment to prevent young people from
starting to use tobacco and helping those that smoke quit. Recent milestones
include the passage of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act,
which gives the Food and Drug Administration authority to regulate tobacco
products, including, to prevent use by minors. Additional support to help
smokers quit is provided through state toll-free quit lines and implementation
of web and mobile based interventions.
Smoking remains the leading cause of preventable death
and disease in the United States, killing more than 443,000 Americans each year.
Cigarette smoking costs the nation $96 billion in direct medical costs and $97
billion in lost productivity each year. More than 8 million Americans are living
with a smoking-related disease, and every day more than 1,000 youth under 18
become daily smokers. Still, nearly 70 percent of smokers say they want to quit,
and half make a serious quit attempt each year. The Tips from Former Smokers
campaign will provide motivation, information, and resources to
help.
For more information on the campaign, including profiles
of the former smokers, other campaign resources, and links to the ads, visit www.cdc.gov/Quitting/Tips. Media
interviews via video Internet are available upon request as well. Please call
the CDC News Branch line at 404-639-3286 or contact via email at media@cdc.gov to
schedule an interview.
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