
YTCC Gives Course on Strategies for Reducing Tobacco Use among Young Adults
Members of the Youth Tobacco Cessation Collaborative (YTCC) developed
and presented the course, "Strategies for Reducing Tobacco Use
among Young Adults" last week at the 2008 Summer Institute in
Phoenix, AZ. More than 25 state and local health department tobacco
control managers, foundation representatives, and other tobacco
control organization representatives attended the three-day course.
Recent data on young adults shows that in 2006, prevalence of
current smoking among 18-24 year olds was 23.9%. Although this
prevalence has decreased almost 50% since 1965 (45.5%), it hasn't
changed since 2003. The young adult population has not responded
to the cessation treatment and delivery methods that have been
shown to work for the older adult population. This population
is unique and their smoking behaviors are different from the rest
of the adult population. Most smoke less than 10 cigarettes per
day and many are casual or social smokers who don't even self
identify as smokers.
Compared to the rest of the adult population, young adults are
more likely to use the internet, use instant messaging and visit
social networking sites, and less likely to read the newspaper.
The best method of marketing to reach this population is word
of mouth. Tobacco companies know this and capitalize on it. The
tobacco industry spent $13.1 billion dollars on advertising and
marketing in 2005. The industry reaches young adults mostly through
buzz marketing, promotions, coupons, and sponsored events at local
bars and clubs.
Innovative strategies are needed to reduce tobacco use among
young adult smokers. Data from recent studies have indicated that
there are many promising approaches for reaching this population.
Policies have been shown to increase cessation, particularly increases
in the price of tobacco. Young adults tend to be more sensitive
to price increases because the share of their disposable incomes
spent on cigarettes is likely to be larger than that of older
adult smokers. Recent estimates indicate that youths are up to
three times more sensitive to price than adults. One study estimates
that a sustained inflation-adjusted price increase of 10 percent
increases the probability of cessation among young adult male
and female smokers by 11 and 12 percent, respectively.
Media campaigns have also been shown to increase cessation among
young adults. In New York City, following implementation of a
media campaign in 2006 within a multi-pronged anti-tobacco policy
initiative began in 2002, young adult smoking decreased by 17.4%,
with an overall significant decrease of 34.9% between 2002-2006.
The course, which focused on prevention and cessation strategies
for reducing tobacco use among young adults, helped participants
gain a better understanding of the young adult population, including
their patterns of tobacco use; what makes them unique from other
groups of smokers; how the tobacco industry targets young adults;
how to reach young adults with specific messages; and unique evaluation
considerations for this population. By the end of the course,
participants had developed an action plan for addressing tobacco
use among the young adult population in their states.
The course was developed through a collaborative effort of several
YTCC members. This planning committee, through regular meetings,
collectively contributed to course content, identified presenters
and developed presentations. Course faculty, including Cathy Backinger
from NCI's Tobacco Control Research Branch, Todd Phillips from
AED, and Ann Malarcher of CDC's Office on Smoking and Health,
led the course.
To download the presentations from the YTCC course, please visit
http://www.youthtobaccocessation.org/.
Sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
the Tobacco Technical Assistance Consortium, the American Legacy
Foundation, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation, American Cancer Society, and the Tobacco Control Network,
the Summer Institute offered over 20 courses, ranging from courses
addressing coalition building to courses dedicated to the evaluation
of tobacco prevention and control programs. For more information
on the Summer Institute 2008, please visit http://www.thesummerinstitute.org/index.html.
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C. Tracy Orleans, Ph.D., Distinguished Fellow and Senior Scientist, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
As the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Senior Scientist, C.
Tracy Orleans, Ph.D., leads the Foundation's efforts to develop
and disseminate science-based strategies for addressing the major
behavioral causes of preventable death and chronic disease. Dr. Orleans
also is the Foundation's first Distinguished Fellow (2005-2009),
a role in which she is developing innovative approaches for assuring
that the Foundation's commitments in key goal areas, especially
tobacco control and childhood obesity prevention, will have a
broad and lasting impact. She oversees a current portfolio of
more than $375 million in RWJF national programs and grants.
Recruited to the Foundation in 1996 as a national leader in tobacco
control and health behavior change research and practice, Dr. Orleans
focused through 1999 on expanding the Foundation's investments
in policy-based approaches to tobacco cessation, and on defining
the Foundation's strategy in health care system-based approaches
to chronic disease management, as convener of both the Tobacco
and Chronic Disease Management Working Groups, respectively. She
then led the Foundation's Health & Behavior Team, through 2004,
in promoting the adoption nationally of healthy behaviors, including
the team's pioneering investments in "active living" policy and
environmental approaches to physical activity promotion.
She has led or co-led over a dozen research-based national programs
(e.g., Addressing Tobacco in Managed Care, Helping Young Smokers
Quit, The Substance Abuse Policy Research Program, Bridging the
Gap, Improving Chronic Illness Care, Active Living Research, and
Healthy Eating Research) and has directed numerous external program
evaluations. She is a founding member of the Youth Tobacco Cessation
Collaborative, National Partnership to Help Pregnant Smokers Quit,
National Tobacco Cessation Collaborative and co-chaired the Consumer
Demand Roundtable.
Dr. Orleans was the first behavioral scientist appointed to the
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. She has contributed to several
Surgeon General's Reports and co-edited the first medical text
on the management of nicotine addiction. In 2005 she was recognized
by the journal Tobacco Control as one of the 100 most
widely cited authors in the field of tobacco control. She continues
to serve on numerous journal editorial boards, national scientific
panels and advisory groups (e.g., Institute of Medicine, National
Cancer Institute, National Commission on Prevention Priorities,
Legacy Foundation). She has been a principal investigator of many
National Institutes of Health grants and has authored or co-authored
more than 200 publications.
Dr. Orleans earned a Ph.D. in clinical psychology from the University
of Maryland with a clinical internship at Duke University Medical
Center, and a B.A. summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Wellesley
College.
Q1: You Co-Chaired the Consumer Demand Roundtable and Strategic Planning Committee and your work has strongly promoted the need to build consumer demand for proven cessation treatments. Why is building consumer demand so important?
Tobacco use remains the nation's leading cause of preventable
death and disease accounting for almost 440,000 premature deaths
each year. Evidence-based tobacco cessation treatments are among
the most effective and cost effective of all medical treatments.
There is no better way to improve the health of the nation that
to help more smokers quit. Effective counseling is now available
free of charge and in multiple languages to smokers throughout
the country through the network of state and territorial quitlines
(1-800-QUIT-NOW), the majority of which now also offer free cessation
medications and/or internet quitting support. Expanded insurance
coverage has greatly reduced cost barriers for other effective
treatments. Most U.S. smokers want to quit and over 40% make a
serious attempt each year -- indicating a strong latent demand
for effective help. Yet only 20-30% of those who try to quit actually
use a proven treatment, with lowest treatment use the populations
with greatest need, low-income populations with the highest rates
of tobacco use. While as a nation we've made great strides in
expanding the reach and use of effective treatments through efforts
targeted mainly at healthcare providers and public and private
insurers, real breakthroughs will increasingly depend on the creative
use of marketing and design innovations used by other consumer
product developers -- and on our treating smokers as consumers,
not just as "patients."
Q2: What has been the biggest impact of the Consumer Demand Initiative on the field of tobacco cessation?
One effect has been to draw more attention to the need to "design for demand" among many leaders in the field -- researchers, practitioners, tobacco control advocates, service and product providers and developers. The primary goals of the Consumer Demand Roundtable were to change the way people thought about and addressed the problem of treatment underuse, and to catalyze feasible innovations that could take seed and spread. A formal evaluation now underway will examine how well we have met these goals and what the concrete effects have been (on research, practice, surveillance, public policy strategies). It will also outline promising next steps for the multiple funders of the Consumer Demand Initiative (the ACS, CDC, Legacy Foundation, NCI, NIDA, RWJF) and the larger National Tobacco Cessation Collaborative (NTCC) of which it is part.
Q3: One of the 6 core strategies for building consumer demand is "Seizing policy changes as opportunities for 'breakthrough' increases in treatment use and quit rates." What public policies have the potential to have the greatest impact on consumer demand for tobacco cessation products and services?
Comprehensive smoke-free air laws, which now cover almost half
of the U.S. population, tobacco tax increases and cessation media
campaigns boost quitting motivation, quit attempts, treatment
use and quit rates. As New York City's dramatic successes have
demonstrated, aligning these policy strategies has enormous potential
to reduce population tobacco use and disparities. Another critical
public policy is to protect and expand the use of tobacco excise
tax and Master Settlement Agreement funds to support state quitlines
and their promotion. Without this critical funding, quitlines
will continue to be underused. This is one area where the lack
of consumer demand -- in the form of smoker advocacy for treatments
they deserve -- needs most to be addressed.
Q4: The new 2008 Clinical Practice Guideline - Treating
Tobacco Use and Dependence was released at the beginning
of May. NTCC plans to translate the recommendations in Guideline
for consumers and conduct outreach over the next year. What is
the potential impact of the Guideline update on the consumers?
The growing awareness of the need to build consumer demand for effective cessation treatments and to address the broad misconceptions smokers have about them has set the stage for unprecedented efforts to communicate Guideline recommendations creatively to consumers themselves. Efforts now planned and underway will use multiple channels from healthcare settings and employers, to local and national print and broadcast media, to new digital technologies critical to viral marketing efforts. I'm especially excited about the Legacy Foundation's "EX" campaign. Efforts like these will greatly magnify the impact of the Guideline update on consumers.
Q5: The revised Guideline recognizes the need to address youth smoking and highlights, for the first time, that counseling is an effective treatment for helping youth smokers quit. Can you talk a little about this important milestone and the role Youth Tobacco Cessation Collaborative (YTCC) can play in increasing consumer demand among youth and young adults?
In 2000, the YTCC set the ambitious goal of assuring that by
2010, smokers aged 12-24 would have access to effective cessation
treatments. At the time, the evidence showed that treatment effective
for adults were not necessarily effective for adolescent smokers.
YTCC funders and members focused their research efforts on identifying
youth treatments that would work and were really gratified not
only that this effort led to evidence-based counseling recommendations
for youth in the 2008 Guideline update, but also to learn that
most state quitlines now offer youth-focused counseling modules.
It's not often that one gets to see progress like this within
such a short period of time. Both the YTCC and NTCC are now focusing
on youth-oriented demand-building efforts, capitalizing on all
that we've learned recently about youth treatment preferences
and misconceptions.
Q6: What do some of the more unconventional NTCC partners, like IDEO and the XPrize Foundation, bring to the field of tobacco cessation?
IDEO and the X Prize Foundation have brought new vision, imagination and tools to the challenges of creating and delivering cessation approaches -- with the potential to dramatically increase population quit rates. IDEO's design principles set new standards for all those involved in the development and delivery of effective treatments. And the Tobacco X Prize can put these principles to work transforming our capacity to reach millions of smokers with treatments that could double their chances of successfully quitting. Both have inspired leaders in the cessation and cancer prevention fields to think and work "outside the box" -- to set our aims for real breakthroughs rather than for incremental improvements.
Q7: How did you get involved in tobacco control?
I got involved in reviewing the literature on health behavior change for the Institute of Medicine's first report, in 1978, on health and behavior. Three of the four of us in Medical Psychology and Psychiatry at Duke Medicine Center who worked on this report were smokers at the time. After learning much more than I ever knew about the harms of smoking, I was dismayed to find that there were very few effective treatments. Immediately after completing that report, two of us quit. While I had tried many times before to quit, this time I learned how hard it was to quit and stay quit. I resolved to find ways to make it easier for people to succeed -- combining a personal challenge with a scientific challenge. I worked to develop an inpatient quit smoking consult service and an outpatient quit smoking clinic at Duke, and then with colleagues at UNC and Group Health Cooperative, to develop the first proactive telephone quitline, Free & Clear.
Q8: What has been the most challenging aspect of your work in tobacco control?
The most challenging aspect of my work has been to find ways to build public demand and will for putting science-based solutions into practice. This is why I am focusing now, through my work at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and as a member of the cessation field, on building consumer demand and also building policy supports for tobacco prevention and cessation.
Q9: What has been the most rewarding aspect of your work in tobacco control?
That's easy. The people I've had the chance to work with. Not only has their dedication, rigor and imagination inspired me to give my best effort to our common work, but I count the many friendships formed over the years as among the greatest blessings of my life.
Q10: What, in your opinion, is the most important challenge facing tobacco control in the year ahead?
In this time of economic downturn, we have to find ways to devote sufficient tobacco excise tax and MSA funds to tobacco control efforts. Recent stalls in youth and adult smoking rate declines and the diversion of tobacco control funds to address state budget gaps are cause for great concern. Our continued progress in tobacco control depends on assuring adequate financial support for tobacco control efforts and infrastructure. Cessation progress depends on adequate funding for anti-tobacco media campaigns and for state quitlines which employers, health plans and providers increasingly rely on to help their employees, enrollees and individual patients to quit. Growing employer interest in tobacco prevention and cessation to maximize productivity and reduce rising healthcare costs indicates a clear role for employers, like those who are members of C-Change, as advocates in this effort. And we also need strong public ("consumer") voices!
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Secondhand Smoke Raises Stroke Risk for Spouses
Nonsmokers who are married to smokers run a significantly
higher risk for experiencing a stroke, a new study suggests.
Researchers also found that ex-smokers married to
men and women who still smoke carry an even greater risk for stroke.
However, nonsmoking spouses of former smokers do not appear to
bear any higher risk for stroke than those married to someone
who had never smoked.
"This adds to the growing evidence that secondhand
smoke is bad for you, and I hope that it will help people who
want to stop smoking to know that it will probably be good for
their spouse's health, too," said Maria Glymour, an assistant
professor of society, human development and health at the Harvard
School of Public Health in Boston. Glymour is also a health and
society scholar in the department of epidemiology at Columbia
University in New York City.
She and her team were expected to publish the findings
in the September issue of the American Journal of Preventive
Medicine.
In the study, all 16,000-plus participants were
50 and older and married. All were categorized according to smoking
habits, and observed for stroke incidence over an average of about
nine years between 1992 and 2006.
Nonsmokers married to a current smoker were found
to have a 42 percent increased risk for stroke, compared with
those married to spouses who had never smoked. Similarly compared,
ex-smokers married to a current smoker had a 72 percent increased
risk for stroke.
As for those married to ex-smokers, Glymour and
her team only observed that the former smokers had kicked their
habit at some point one to 50 years before the start of the study.
They could not pinpoint exactly how much time would need to elapse
after a smoking spouse quits before their husband or wife's stroke
risk fully dissipated.
"But we think the risk to the spouse probably starts
to decline right away," Glymour noted. "And that would be consistent
with what we already know about stroke and active smoking, which
is that if you stop smoking your own health risks decline quickly."
Thomas J. Glynn, director of cancer science and
trends at the American Cancer Society, said that he found Glymour's
analysis to be "very reasonable."
"And, in general, I would say that this study provides
further valuable evidence of the general dangers of secondhand
smoke, and, in particular, the great and often over-looked danger
of heart disease, he said. And, of course, it emphasizes the need
for anyone who smokes to stop smoking, and at a minimum to establish
smoke-free zones in the home, or not smoke in the home at all. For more information, see web link:
The
Washington Post, July 29, 2008
Contests to Quit Smoking Don't Work in the Long Run
Despite prizes ranging from lottery tickets to cash
payments, quit-smoking contests do not help people kick the habit
in the end, according to a new systematic review of studies.
None of the 17 studies, which involved roughly 6,300
participants, demonstrated significantly higher long-term quit
rates for smokers offered incentives, despite some creative approaches.
In one study, participants were encouraged to toss
their cigarettes down the toilet and rewarded with one lottery
ticket per day. Another offered payments of $10 per month and
participation in a monthly worksite lottery. Yet another offered
cash prizes ranging from $100 to $250, along with certificates
of recognition.
The review appears in the latest issue of The
Cochrane Library, a publication of The Cochrane Collaboration,
an international organization that evaluates medical research.
Systematic reviews draw evidence-based conclusions about medical
practice after considering both the content and quality of existing
medical trials on a topic.
Studies occurred in the United States, Canada,
the United Kingdom and Australia. Workplaces and clinics were
common settings for the competitions.
"In my view, none of them was effective," said review
co-author Kate Cahill at the University of Oxford. "One of our
main conclusions was that if incentives work at all, they only
work while they're in place; if you revisit those quitters 12
or 24 months down the line, they [smokers offered incentives]
were generally no more successful" than counterparts not offered
incentives. One-year cessation rates for participants in one study
were 22 percent - more than double that of those not offered incentives.
However, by the one-year evaluation, the quit rate
for participants was much closer to that of non-participants.
In addition, the difference between participants and the group
not offered incentives "had become non-significant at the two-year
follow up," the reviewers found.
Offering incentives is a tricky business. "An effective
incentive should be large enough to attract smokers motivated
to try and quit, but not so attractive that the desire to win
outweighs the seriousness of the quit attempt," the reviewers
say.
In a 1994 paper, which was not part of the Cochrane
review, an Australian researcher described how one smoking-cessation
competition offered a $30,000 car as a grand prize.
By polling entrants after the contest, researchers
"found that 34 percent were either ex-smokers or never-smokers
who had entered the contest solely in order to win the prize,
confident that they could confirm their smoke-free status with
a breath sample." Cahill recalled. "I think it's a perfectly valid
approach to reward people for entering a smoking cessation program
… but the risk of deception rises with the scale of the cessation
rewards."
Public health officials continue a barrage of efforts
- including contests. Earlier this summer, a Scottish Health Board
announced a three-month incentive plan in Dundee, Cahill said.
Smokers who pass a weekly breath test will get the equivalent
of about $24 each time in the form of grocery credit. Winners
cannot use the money for alcohol or tobacco.
For more information, see web link:
Newswire,
July 15, 2008
Fewer Americans Are Breathing Secondhand Smoke
A new study from the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention cleared the air and found fewer Americans are breathing
in harmful second hand smoke.
The research, published in the Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report, found nearly half of nonsmoking
Americans are still breathing in cigarette fumes, but since the
early 1990s the percentage has declined dramatically.
"It's still high," said Cinzia Marano, one of the
study's authors. "There is no safe level of exposure."
Researchers said one driving force behind the decline
in secondhand smoke is the growing number of laws and policies
that ban smoking in workplaces, bars, restaurants and public places.
The CDC reported 46 percent of non-smoking adults
had signs of nicotine in their blood according to tests performed
in 1999 through 2004. The number was a major drop from the late
1980s when similar tests were done and the number stood at 84
percent.
The government report used data that was collected
on about 17,000 nonsmokers, ages 4 and up, in the years 1988 through
1994. It looked at the same number of participants in 1999 through
2004.
The decline in secondhand smoke exposure was less
for black nonsmokers who saw a decline from 94 percent to 71 percent.
For whites, the numbers dropped from 83 percent to 43 percent
and for Mexican-Americans, 78 percent to 40 percent.
The CDC said one troubling statistic, was second
hand smoke exposure for children did not decrease as dramatically
as it did for adults.
According to the data, more than 60 percent of children
ages 4 through 11 had recent exposure to cigarette smoke in the
1999-2004 period.
"Obviously, the exposure is at home," said Thomas
Glynn, the American Cancer Society's director for cancer science
and trends.
CDC officials say it's unclear if adult smokers
are smoking more in their cars or at home due to recent bans.
However, researchers said they're probably not smoking much less
in those places, a factor that could explain why their kids' exposure
to tobacco smoke didn't decline as much as adults.
The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
provided data for the CDC. The survey consisted of sending mobile
trailers out to communities where participants were asked about
their health, received blood tests, and physical exams.
For more information, see web link:
RedOrbit July 11, 2008
Common Genetic Variations Increase Risk of Life-long Nicotine Addiction for Young Smokers
Common genetic variations affecting nicotine receptors
in the nervous system can significantly increase the chance that
European Americans who begin smoking by age 17 will struggle with
life-long nicotine addiction. Published in the July 11 issue of
PLoS Genetics, this research, led by scientists at the
University of Utah together with colleagues from the University
of Wisconsin, highlights the importance of preventing early exposure
to tobacco through public health policies.
These common genetic variations, or single nucleotide
polymorphisms (SNPs), are changes in a single unit of DNA. A haplotype
is a set of SNPs that are statistically linked. The researchers
found that one haplotype for the nicotine receptor put European
American smokers at a greater risk of heavy nicotine dependence
as adults, but only if they began daily smoking before the age
of 17. A second haplotype actually reduced the risk of adult heavy
nicotine dependence for people who began smoking in their youth.
The researchers studied 2,827 long-term European
American smokers, recruited in Utah and Wisconsin, and to the
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's Lung Health Study.
They assessed the level of nicotine dependence for all smokers,
recording the age they began smoking daily, the number of years
they smoked, and the average number of cigarettes smoked per day.
DNA samples were taken from all smokers, and the researchers recorded
the occurrence of common SNPs, grouped into four haplotypes, which
had been identified earlier in a subset of participants.
They found that people who began smoking before
the age of 17 and possessed two copies of the high-risk haplotype
had from a 1.6-fold to almost 5-fold increase in risk of heavy
smoking as an adult. For people who began smoking at age 17 or
older, presence of the high-risk haplotype did not significantly
influence their risk of later addiction.
Although the authors caution that different haplotype
frequencies would likely be observed in different ethnic populations,
Robert Weiss, Ph.D., professor of human genetics at the University
of Utah and lead author of the study, explains: "We know that
people who begin smoking at a young age are more likely to face
severe nicotine dependence later in life. This finding suggests
that genetic influences expressed during adolescence contribute
to the risk of lifetime addiction severity produced from the early
onset of tobacco use."
"This study adds to recent advances in understanding
how genetic variation can affect susceptibility to nicotine addiction,
success or failure of smoking cessation treatments, and the risk
of disease associated with tobacco use," says National Institute
on Drug Abuse (NIDA) Director Dr. Nora Volkow. "As we learn more
about how both genes and environment play a role in smoking, we
will be able to better tailor both prevention and cessation programs
to individuals." The study was funded in part by NIDA and the
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), parts of the
National Institutes of Health (NIH).
For more information, see web link:
PLoS
Genetics July 11, 2008
Smoking Ban
in England Has Saved 40,000 Lives
The nationwide smoking ban has triggered the biggest
fall in smoking ever seen in England, a recent report says.
More than two billion fewer cigarettes were smoked and 400,000
people quit the habit since the ban was introduced a year ago,
which researchers say will prevent 40,000 deaths over the next
10 years.
Smoking was outlawed in all enclosed public spaces in England,
including pubs and restaurants, on July 1, 2007 after a prolonged
political battle that split the Government and inflamed critics
of Britain as a nanny state.
But longer term opposition to the ban never materialized: more
than three out of four people support the law, and compliance
has been virtually 100 percent.
Similar bans were introduced in Scotland in March 2006 and in
Wales in April 2007. Doctors said they were astonished by the
numbers quitting. Robert West, director of tobacco studies at
the Health Behavior Research Unit, University College London,
who carried out the study, said: "These figures show the
largest fall in the number of smokers on record. The effect has
been as large in all social groups – poor as well as rich.
I never expected such a dramatic impact." There was no guarantee
that smoking rates would not start to rise again, after falling,
and it was crucial to maintain the downward pressure, Professor
West said. Currently around 22 percent of the adult population
smoke in Britain.
"If the Department of Health can keep up the momentum this
has created, there is a realistic prospect of achieving a target
of less than 15 percent of the population smoking within 10 years,"
he said.
The survey of 32,000 people in England interviewed before and
after the ban took effect found the decline in smoking had accelerated.
In the nine months before the ban it fell 1.6 percent compared
with 5.5 percent in the nine months after the ban. Researchers
estimate on the basis of these figures that 400,000 people quit
smoking as a result of the ban.
Jean King, Cancer Research UK's director of tobacco control,
said: "The smoke-free law was introduced to protect the health
of workers from the harmful effects of secondhand smoke. The results
show it has also encouraged smokers to quit. These laws are saving
lives and we mustn't forget that half of all smokers die from
tobacco-related illness. We must do everything possible to continue
this success – we now need a national tobacco control plan
for the next five years."
Cigarette sales fell by 6 percent in the past year, according
to the market research company, Neilson. In the 10 months from
July 2007 to the end of April 2008, 1.93 billion fewer cigarettes
were sold in England and 220,000 fewer in Scotland (where the
smoking ban was introduced a year earlier), equivalent to a total
decline in sales over the full year of 2.6 billion.
Jake Shepherd, the marketing director at Neilson, said smoking
had been hit by a triple whammy, which accounted for the dramatic
effect.
"In addition to the smoking ban, sales have been hit by
the outlawing of the sale of tobacco to under-18s and the increase
of duty on tobacco, which is pricing cash-strapped smokers out
of the market," he said.
For more information, see web link:
The
Independent June 30, 2008
American Lung
Association Report Finds Lung Disease Death Rates Increasing While
Cancer, Heart Disease and Stroke Death Rates Are Decreasing
According to the latest report by the American Lung
Association, Lung Disease Data, death rates due to lung
disease are currently increasing while death rates due to other
leading causes of death such as heart disease, cancer and stroke
are declining. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is
expected to become the third leading cause of death by 2020.
The American Lung Association publishes Lung Disease Data
to serve as a resource to the public, media, healthcare professionals,
researchers and lung disease patients and their caregivers on
the latest trends and research in lung disease, along with relevant
facts and figures about some of the most common lung diseases
in the United States today.
Lung disease is any disease or disorder where lung function is
impaired. Lung diseases can be caused by long-term and immediate
exposure to smoking, secondhand smoke, air pollution, occupational
hazards such as asbestos and silica dust, carcinogens that trigger
tumor growth, infectious agents, and over reactive immune defenses.
“Every year, about 400,000 Americans die from lung disease,”
said Bernadette Toomey, President and CEO of the American Lung
Association. “With our report, Lung Disease Data, we hope
to provide valuable information on lung disease to the public,
especially to people who become ill and their family members who
are caring for them,” she continued.
The American Lung Association strongly believes that if cigarette
smoking, preventable premature childbirth, disregard for workers’
safety and violation of clean-air laws were to end today, a future
largely free of the most lethal forms of lung disease would be
possible.
The American Lung Association urges Congress to pass the Family
Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act and to fund a COPD
program at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). The Lung Association
is actively working to pass comprehensive smokefree laws across
the country to eliminate people’s exposure to secondhand
smoke, as well as to encourage the federal and state governments
to pass policies to increase cessation services for the over 45
million U.S. adult smokers.
“As our nation wrestles with how to pay for increasing
health care costs, we must look at the tremendous financial burden
caused by tobacco in this nation,” Toomey added. “Tobacco
use costs the United States an estimated $193 billion annually,
including $96 billion in direct health care expenditures.”
To download the full report, please visit www.lungusa.org
and visit the research section.
For more information, see web link:
The
American Lung Association Press Release, June 27, 2008
CDC Survey
Shows a Decade of Progress in Reducing High School Smoking
The latest survey of high school smoking rates,
released by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC), shows that while the nation has made remarkable progress
in reducing youth smoking since 1997, rates of current smoking
have been essentially stalled since 2003.
The good news in the 2007 Youth Risk Behavior Survey is that
the high school smoking rate declined by 45 percent between 1997
and 2007, from 36.4 percent to 20 percent. The high school smoking
rate is now at the lowest level since this survey was first conducted
in 1991. Smoking has declined significantly among both boys and
girls and among all populations surveyed. Since 1997, smoking
has declined by 42 percent among white students, 49 percent among
African-American students and 51 percent among Hispanic students.
In 2007, high school smoking rates were 23.2 percent for white
students, 16.7 percent for Hispanic students and 11.6 percent
for African-American students.
The dramatic decline in youth smoking since 1997 is powerful
proof that scientifically proven measures, implemented primarily
at the state and local level, are working. These include higher
cigarette prices resulting from state cigarette tax increases
and the 1998 state tobacco settlement; a growing number of state
and local laws requiring smoke-free workplaces and public places;
and effective, well-funded tobacco prevention programs run by
the states and nationally by the American Legacy Foundation.
Thanks to these efforts, the country has made great progress
over the last decade in reducing youth smoking. Unfortunately
that decline has stalled in recent years. From 2003 to 2005, high
school smoking rates rose by just over one percentage point, from
21.9 percent to 23 percent. While there was a small improvement
from 2005 to 2007—rates declined to 20 percent last year—the
reduction was not statistically significant.
This recent stall in progress coincides with aggressive efforts
by tobacco companies to discount cigarette prices and undermine
state cigarette tax increases, cuts in tobacco prevention programs,
and huge increases in tobacco marketing:
From 1997 to 2003, when youth (and adult) smoking rates declined
significantly, the average real (inflation adjusted) retail price
of a pack of cigarettes increased by 75 percent as a result of
the tobacco settlement and cigarette tax increases. Since 2003,
however the real price has actually declined slightly despite
a number of state tobacco tax increases, and smoking declines
have subsequently stalled. Cigarette prices have been stable or
even declining because the tobacco companies have cut prices and
currently spend more than 80 percent of their $13.4 billion marketing
dollars on price discounts that counteract the effects of state
cigarette tax increases. The tobacco companies have done this
because they know that higher cigarette prices are one of the
most effective ways to reduce smoking, especially among kids.
Between 2002 and 2005, states cut funding for tobacco prevention
and cessation programs by 28 percent (approximately $200 million).
While funding has increased somewhat since, only three states
(Maine, Delaware and Colorado) fund tobacco prevention programs
at CDC-recommended levels for FY 2008 despite the fact all the
states combined collect nearly $25 billion a year in revenue from
the tobacco settlement and tobacco taxes. At the national level,
the American Legacy Foundation had to reduce its highly successful
truth® public education media campaign because most of its
funding under the 1998 tobacco settlement ended after 2003.
While states cut funding for tobacco prevention, tobacco marketing
expenditures have skyrocketed since the 1998 state tobacco settlement.
From 1998 to 2005, tobacco marketing expenditures nearly doubled
from $6.9 billion to $13.4 billion, according to the most recent
Federal Trade Commission report on tobacco marketing.
This survey demonstrates that we know what works to reduce tobacco
use and that elected officials at all levels, including Congress,
must step up the fight against the nation's No. 1 killer by aggressively
implementing proven solutions. Congress has an immediate opportunity
to act by passing legislation to grant the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) authority over tobacco products, which, among
other things, would crack down on tobacco marketing and sales
to youth.
The CDC survey can be found at www.cdc.gov/mmwr.
For more information, see web link:
Campaign
for Tobacco Free Kids Press Release, June 26, 2008
TOP

Billionaires
Back Anti-Smoking Effort
Bill Gates and Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg recently
announced that they would spend $500 million to stop people around
the world from smoking.
The World Health Organization estimates that tobacco
will kill up to a billion people in the 21st century, 10 times
as many as it killed in the 20th century.
This time, most are expected to be in poor countries
like Bangladesh and middle-income countries like Russia. In an
effort to cut that number, Mr. Bloomberg's foundation plans to
commit $250 million over four years on top of a $125 million gift
he announced two years ago. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
is allocating $125 million over five years.
The $500 million would be spent on a multipronged
campaign - nicknamed Mpower - that Mr. Bloomberg and Dr. Margaret
Chan, director of the health organization, outlined in February.
It coordinates efforts by the Bloomberg Initiative to Reduce Tobacco
Use, the World Health Organization, the World Lung Foundation,
the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the foundation
of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Campaign
for Tobacco-Free Kids.
It will urge governments to sharply raise tobacco
taxes, prohibit smoking in public places, outlaw advertising to
children and cigarette giveaways, start antismoking advertising
campaigns and offer people nicotine patches or other help quitting.
Health officials, consumer advocates, journalists, tax officers
and others from third world countries will be brought to the United
States for workshops on topics like lobbying, public service advertising,
catching cigarette smugglers and running telephone help lines
for smokers wanting to quit. A list of grants is at www.tobaccocontrolgrants.org.
Dr. Richard Peto, an Oxford epidemiologist who
leads studies on the effects of smoking in the developing world,
called the announcement "excellent news."
"I reckon this will avoid tens of millions of deaths
in my lifetime and hundreds of millions in my kids' lifetimes,"
he said.
Mr. Bloomberg, founder of the financial news company
bearing his name and creator of the Bloomberg Family Foundation,
has long been known for his antipathy to tobacco. During his administration,
New York has adopted several antismoking measures, including a
ban on smoking in bars and restaurants, and significant increases
in cigarette taxes.
The global campaign promises to be a struggle. Cigarettes
not only are highly addictive and supported by huge advertising
campaigns, they are also an important source of income for many
foreign governments. In China and other countries, tobacco is
a state-owned monopoly, and low- and middle-income countries collect
$66 billion a year in tobacco taxes.
Only about 5 percent of the world's countries have
any antismoking measures like those the campaign envisions. But
Dr. Peto said antismoking campaigns were already having some effects,
even in countries where no-smoking signs are often ignored. He
surveyed thousands of tobacco users in China in the 1990s - "before
the government was taking it seriously," he said - and found 4
percent who identified themselves as former smokers. Now, he said,
20 percent do.
Waves of lung cancer deaths - which typically begin
about 40 years after smoking takes hold in a society - help convince
the next generation that smoking is dangerous, as in the United
States in the 1960s, Dr. Peto said. And, he added, "When doctors
and journalists start to take it seriously, things start to change."
The Gates Foundation's main focus has been global
health, but up until now it has concentrated mostly on infectious
diseases. Mr. Gates said he had been "looking at" tobacco deaths
but was unsure what to do. "We were thrilled when Michael and
his experts took the lead," he said.
For more information, see web link:
The
New York Times, July 24, 2008
Next-Gen Stop
Smoking Via Text Message Service Launched
Mohave County Department of Public Health in Arizona
is the first health provider in the USA to roll-out a world-first
second-generation smoking cessation text messaging service, STOMP
(STop smoking Over Mobile Phone) from Healthphone Solutions.
STOMP sends smokers trying to quit a series of personalized text
messages over 26 weeks. The next-generation service uses text
messages based on a clinically-developed program with proven medical
efficacy and offers several interactive features. Clinical trials
have shown that using STOMP doubled reported quit rates from 13
percent to 28 percent after six weeks.
Mohave County Department of Public Health will use STOMP in a
pilot project to reach young smokers, and will enroll high school
students caught smoking into the service as a form of youth diversion
instead of suspending them from school. Court judges and School
Resource Officers in Mohave Country will be asked to refer students
to the program. The project is funded by the Arizona Department
of Health Services, Bureau of Tobacco Education Prevention Program.
"Using mobile phones to stop smoking, we hope will engage
the hard-to-reach and at-risk groups like young adults in a way
that suits them," says Susan Williams, Mohave County Tobacco
Use Prevention Program Coordinator.
"Quitting tobacco is a very personal and uphill battle to
overcome a powerful addiction. Using a text message program allows
participants to receive cessation messages at their fingertips
throughout the entire day when the participant needs it the most."
STOMP empowers smokers to quit by enabling them to be a stakeholder
in their own well being, acting as a reminder that they want to
give up smoking and providing distraction and motivation to help
them stop smoking. Messages follow a clinically-developed 26 week
program with phases building up to the user's nominated quit day,
followed by an intensive period and then maintenance. Messages
use various intervention techniques including tips on quitting,
support while quitting, facts about smoking and the ability for
users to respond to multiple choice polls. Users can also send
a message to the service when they are craving a cigarette, have
accidentally smoked a cigarette or have relapsed and will receive
specific support for coping with those problems. Users can designate
a period each day when they will not receive texts, and STOMP
will not send texts during school hours.
The service runs on the Healthphone Messaging Engine which can
be tailored to a variety of scenarios and to integrate with other
public health services and campaigns.
Debbi Gillotti, Chief Executive Officer of Healthphone Solutions
says, "STOMP is a great example of how technology can empower
and support people to take charge of their own well-being. It
offers an excellent means to reach consumers wherever and whenever
the urge for smoking occurs because it leverages a device they
are very familiar with - their mobile phone."
STOMP is hosted by Healthphone and so doesn't place additional
demands on health providers' computer resources.
For more information, see web link:
Medical
News Today July 24, 2008
New York State
Prohibits Smoking in Addiction Recovery Centers
Many drug addicts, problem gamblers and alcoholics
may find it harder to kick their habits in New York now that the
state has become the first in the country to ban smoking at all
recovery centers.
Some addicts say losing the tobacco crutch could keep them from
getting clean and sober, or from trying at all.
New York's 13 state-run addiction treatment centers have been
tobacco free for more than 10 years. New regulations that took
effect on July 24, 2008 apply to private treatment centers. Some
are worried that people who need help for drugs and alcohol won't
pursue it because they aren't ready to quit smoking.
Bryan Lapsker, a 21-year-old PCP addict from Brooklyn who has
been getting help for his addiction at a treatment center in Queens
for nearly nine months, has been dreading the change every day.
"Nicotine helps (addicts) get through the day," he
said. "Now you take the nicotine away from us, it's almost
impossible to get through the day ... addiction is addiction,
I understand that, but nicotine is a legal substance."
Legal or not, state officials behind the new rules believe banning
tobacco is critical to successful treatment programs.
"Often times smoking was given as a reward in the day-to-day
treatment programs, and we need to make sure that we're changing
the culture to really promote an overall recovery plan that involves
health and wellness for the optimal chance for recovery,"
said Karen Carpenter-Palumbo, the commissioner of the New York
Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services.
About one in five New Yorkers smoke, compared to nine in 10 chemically
dependent New Yorkers, she said.
Addicts are more likely to have long-term success if they quit
smoking at the same time they enter treatment, Carpenter-Palumbo
said.
A 2004 study in the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
found that smoking cessation intervention provided during addiction
treatment was associated with a 25 percent better chance of maintaining
long term abstinence from alcohol and drugs.
Thomas Carr, the manager of national policy at the American Lung
Association, said he's not aware of any other states that have
taken this kind of action — although individual facilities
around the country have eliminated smoking and offered cessation
help.
An $8 million grant from the New York Department of Health will
help train employees to deal with treating nicotine dependence
and provide free nicotine replacements.
Treatment facilities will have a six-month grace period in which
tobacco use won't be a factor in whether their certification is
renewed. They will also be able to develop their own plans to
become tobacco-free and decide at what point an addict would have
to leave for violating the rules.
Roy Kearse is the vice president of residential services at Samaritan
Village, the Queens-based long-term treatment facility where Lapsker
and other addicts get treatment at multiple locations.
While Kearse supports eliminating tobacco use among addicts,
he is concerned the zero-tolerance policy could discourage some
from seeking help.
"We don't know how many people will leave, if any at all
will leave," Kearse said. "But we did have patients
who said 'I didn't come in here to deal with my smoking addiction,
I came in here for my heroin addiction, or my addiction to crack.'"
Lapsker, getting treatment through a court-ordered mandate, says
he is grateful for his time at Samaritan. But he said if he faces
a potential relapse after leaving the facility he will "definitely
not" go seek help because he doesn't want to quit smoking.
"I look forward to my every cigarette that I smoke,"
Lapsker said. "That's what gets me through the day, through
the stress, through the pressure."
For more information, see web link:
Business
Week, July 23, 2008
More Smokers
Seek Help with Quitting Since Latest Cigarette Tax Took Effect
When Richard Alderman first started smoking 50 years
ago, a pack of cigarettes cost a quarter. After New York’s
latest tax increase on cigarettes, which brought the price as
high as $10 a pack in some stores, Mr. Alderman found himself
dipping into his food budget to afford his Marlboros.
He said he managed to cut back from a pack a day to about eight
cigarettes using the nicotine patch, but decided he needed more
help quitting completely. So he went to the smoking-cessation
program at St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center to get a
prescription for Chantix, a non-nicotine medication that reduces
the urge to smoke.
“It’s another vice I have to give up to survive,
not only health-wise, but financially,” explained Mr. Alderman,
58, who said he lives in a single-room-occupancy building in Times
Square and depends on federal disability payments and food stamps.
Clients like Mr. Alderman at smoking-cessation programs around
the city have been citing the $1.25 tax increase that took effect
June 3 as their motivation for quitting, and several programs
have seen their numbers balloon in the weeks since.
Tax increases are the most effective measure known to reduce
demand for tobacco, according to reports published by the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, and The British Medical Journal.
Young people and poor people are most responsive to price changes,
the research shows.
Requests to New York City’s 311 line for advice on quitting
tripled during the week of June 2, with 2,700 calls this year
compared with 850 calls during the same period in 2007. Calls
to the New York State Smokers’ Quitline — including
those transferred from 311 — quadrupled, to 9,750 from 2,295
a year ago.
“It was a huge surge,” said John Randolph, one of
the state’s quitline specialists. “We were answering
the phones all day long.” Mr. Randolph, 66, a former smoker
who has been telephone-counseling would-be quitters for about
two years, said that over and over again, people mentioned the
tax as what “pushed them over the edge to quit.”
Callers to the state’s toll-free number, (866) 697-8487,
can choose to speak to a counselor, have materials mailed to them
or listen to recorded “tips to quit.” Those waiting
on hold get a litany of tobacco facts more frightening than any
Muzak.
“If you’re thinking about stopping smoking and need
a few more reasons to stop, consider this,” a woman says,
with a hint of drama. “Tobacco kills more Americans than
alcohol, cocaine, crack, heroin, homicide, suicide, car accidents,
fire and AIDS combined.”
Mr. Randolph estimated that 90 to 95 percent of the people he
talked to requested a free two-week supply of nicotine-replacement
therapy: patches, gum or lozenges. After mailing it out, counselors
make a follow-up call a week or two later. Uninsured callers or
those on Medicaid can receive up to six weeks’ worth of
free packets and get at least four call-backs.
Ursula Bauer, the director of the division of chronic disease
prevention and adult health for the New York State Department
of Health, said 20 to 30 percent of the quitline callers quit
successfully within a year, a comparable rate to other state hotlines.
“The quitline is impressive when you look at the return
on investment,” Dr. Bauer said. “It’s an extremely
cost-effective service.” The annual budget for the New York
State Smokers’ Quitline is $6.5 million; of that, $3.5 million
goes to nicotine replacement therapy.
While the vast majority of quitline callers stick to telephone
counseling and nicotine replacement therapy, counselors do refer
some callers to support groups or hospital-based clinics. Some
of these clinics have also seen a surge in clients following the
tax increase, bolstered by city- and state-sponsored public-education
campaigns and the city’s nicotine patch giveaway on June
3, when smokers picked up free samples of the patch at more than
40 sites.
Lourdes Robles, coordinating manager of the quit-smoking program
at Woodhull Medical and Mental Health Center in Brooklyn, said
enrollment doubled during the two years ending June 30, to 5,172
from 2,501. “Everyone mentions” the tax these days,
Ms. Robles said, though cost is usually one of many factors in
the ultimate decision to quit.
“People will smoke until they’re ready to quit. They
don’t care how much it costs,” Ms. Robles said. “When
they get a warning sign from their doctor, with the price increase,
then they start looking for a program.”
For more information, see web link:
The
New York Times, July 20, 2008
Entertainment
Industry Foundation Unites Major Studios and State of California
for Historic Anti-Smoking Campaign
The Entertainment Industry Foundation (EIF) recently announced
that the six major studios will include anti-smoking public service
announcements produced by the California Health and Human Services
Agency on millions of youth-rated DVDs of motion pictures that
include scenes with tobacco use.
Through this campaign, Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures Entertainment,
Twentieth Century Fox, Universal Pictures, Walt Disney Company
and Warner Bros. will place California's anti-smoking public service
announcements in the opening minutes of DVDs of all new movies
with tobacco use that are rated G, PG and PG-13.
"This is a strong and responsible step on the part of the
entertainment industry that will go a long way toward countering
the influence of tobacco use in films," said Kim Belshe,
California Health and Human Services Secretary. "With this
agreement, we will be able to promote the benefits of living tobacco-free
to millions of viewers at no cost to taxpayers, while encouraging
important conversations between parents and their children about
the dangers of smoking."
EIF, which has focused for several years on combating the negative
effects of "glamorized" smoking in films, brought the
State of California and the Hollywood studios together and handled
the production details to make this first-of-its-kind initiative
a reality.
"The State of California is a great partner, having produced
some of the most successful anti-smoking public service announcements.
California's Tobacco Control Program PSAs have helped the state
achieve some of the lowest adult and teen smoking rates in the
country," said EIF President and CEO Lisa Paulsen. "We're
proud to have played a role in bringing the state and all the
studios together."
The public service announcements will appear before the films
on each DVD and can currently be seen online at http://www.TobaccoFreeCA.com.
At the end of each 30-second PSA, viewers are directed to http://www.TobaccoFreeCA.com,
for information on the dangers of smoking and for help in quitting
and helping others quit. Resources are available in all 50 states.
The PSAs were developed by the state's Tobacco Control Program,
which is operated by the California Department of Public Health,
one of 12 departments in the California Health and Human Services
Agency.
Through its initiative called Hollywood Unfiltered, EIF is committed
to working from within the entertainment industry to reduce tobacco's
negative consequences by educating members about the impact smoking
has on young people and the steps they can take to make a difference.
This commitment from the studios is another step in EIF's work
to reduce the impact of smoking on young people. Partners in this
effort include the Motion Picture Association of America, Alliance
of Motion Picture and Television Producers, Directors Guild of
America, International Alliance for Theatrical Stage Employees,
Screen Actors Guild and Writers Guild of America.
Additionally, EIF and the Motion Picture & Television Fund
(MPTF), with support from the Motion Picture Industry Pension
& Health Plan, operate the first ever industry-led smoking
cessation program. Called Picture Quitting, this program combines
free counseling with low-cost medication for people in the entertainment
industry who want to quit smoking. The success rate of this custom-tailored
quit smoking program is twice that of the national average.
For more information, see web link:
Market
Watch, July 11, 2008
Governor Doyle
Says Adult Smoking Hits All-time Low in Wisconsin
Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle recently announced
that adult smoking in Wisconsin has reached a record low. The
new adult smoking prevalence rate in Wisconsin of 19.6 percent
marks the first time the number has ever been below 20 percent.
"We're very encouraged by this news," Governor Doyle
said. "This number clearly demonstrates that Wisconsin's
tobacco prevention and control efforts are making a difference
in the lives of smokers across the state."
The new figures come from the 2007 Wisconsin Behavioral Risk
Factor Surveillance System Survey, a telephone survey of state
residents age 18 and older. The survey measures smoking prevalence
by education, age, ethnicity, gender and income. The new adult
prevalence rate of 19.6 percent is down from 24 percent in 2000.
Currently, the national adult smoking rate is 20 percent.
Governor Doyle has taken a number of steps to reduce smoking
in Wisconsin, including raising the cigarette tax by $1 and dedicating
new funds to cessation programs, providing free quit-smoking medications
through the state's Quit Line, and increasing youth tobacco prevention
campaigns. Governor Doyle also urged the Legislature to make restaurants
and taverns, along with other indoor workplaces, smokefree as
part of his strategy to confront the dangers of tobacco.
Since January 1, when the cigarette tax went into effect, a record
20,000 people have called the Wisconsin Tobacco Quit Line. The
Quit Line (1-800-QUIT NOW) also offers free coaching to smokers.
For a fact sheet on the new adult prevalence numbers and information
on Wisconsin's tobacco prevention and control efforts, visit www.dhfs.wisconsin.gov/tobacco.
For more information, see web link:
WKOW
TV, June 27, 2008
Dell Will
Ban Smoking on Its U.S. Campuses
Dell Inc. is going tobacco-free throughout the
U.S.
The company will ban smoking at all its domestic facilities as
of Jan. 1, according to a memo sent to employees June 25.
The prohibition applies to all employees and visitors, and it
covers all the company's owned and leased properties, including
parking lots and vehicles in those lots, the memo said. The note
did not lay out any specific penalties for violations of the rule.
"Like any Dell policy, there's an expectation that employees
will follow" this one, said spokesman Jess Blackburn.
In the note, Dell said it would provide free programs to help
employees quit tobacco products and would pay for up to three
months of tobacco-cessation prescriptions.
For employees who complete a company-sponsored program to quit,
the company will reduce the contributions taken from each paycheck
for medical coverage, according to the memo.
"This decision actually follows in the footsteps of our
Panama campus and many other companies, cities and countries around
the world as they show support for healthy people and a healthy
planet," the memo said.
U.S. companies have instituted a wide range of anti-tobacco policies,
in some cases cracking down on employees who smoke anywhere. The
push has been sparked in large part by soaring health-care costs,
often inflated by higher premiums for individuals who smoke.
Though Dell said it crafted the policy to improve workforce health,
Blackburn said that "any programs that result in better employee
health have another natural benefit of reducing health-care costs."
For more information, see web link:
Austin
American Statesman June 26, 2008
Partnership
for Prevention® Releases Two New Action Guides
Partnership for Prevention® has developed a
new tool, Smoke-Free Policies: Establishing a Smoke-Free Ordinance
to Reduce Exposure to Secondhand Smoke in Indoor Worksites and
Public Places—An Action Guide, to help public health professionals
maximize the beneficial impact of smoke-free laws. Rooted in The
Guide to Community Preventive Services: What Works to Improve
Health? (Community Guide), this tool translates an evidence-based
recommendation into practical implementation guidance. Web links
to additional resources and tools are provided to assist with
planning and implementing a smoke-free ordinance.
In addition to this tool, Partnership for Prevention® and
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have developed
Healthcare Provider Reminder Systems, Provider Education, and
Patient Education: Working with Healthcare Delivery Systems to
Improve the Delivery of Tobacco-Use Treatment to Patients—An
Action Guide. This evidence-based tool is for public health practitioners,
healthcare providers, and others interested in increasing delivery
of tobacco-use treatment in clinical settings. Links to tools
and resources, tips for implementation and overcoming potential
obstacles, suggested resource needs, and questions and potential
data sources for evaluation planning are also included.
Visit http://www.prevent.org/actionguides
to order hard copies of the guides or download copies for free.
For more information, see web link:
Partnership for Prevention®
website
TOP

Funding
Opportunities
- Testing
Tobacco Products Promoted to Reduce Harm, PA-07-174 (R01s).
Expires May 2, 2009.
- Testing
Tobacco Products Promoted to Reduce Harm, PA-06-361 (R21s).
Expires March 6, 2009.
- Improving
Effectiveness of Smoking Cessation Interventions and Programs
in Low Income Adult Populations, RFA-CA-08-022 (R01). Sponsor: National Cancer
Institute & National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH, DHHS.
- Improving
Effectiveness of Smoking Cessation Interventions and Programs
in Low Income Adult Populations, RFA-CA-08-023 (R21). Sponsor: National Cancer
Institute & National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH, DHHS.
-
Independent Scientist Award (K02) Sponsor: National Institutes
of Health (multiple institutes), DHHS.
- Health
Promotion Among Racial and Ethnic Minority Males, PA-07-421 (R21), Sponsor:
National Institutes of Health (multiple institutes), DHHS.
- Reducing
Health Disparities Among Minority and Underserved Children, PA-07-391
(R21). Sponsor: National Institutes of Health (multiple institutes),
DHHS.
Conferences
and Trainings
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