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Federal Government Receives Failing Grades on Tobacco Control in Annual American Lung Association Report
American Lung Association Calls on Federal, State Leaders to Take Action
and Close the Door on America's Tobacco Epidemic
NEW YORK, Jan. 10 PRNewswire-USNewswire — The American Lung Association's State of Tobacco Control 2007 report, an annual report card on federal and state tobacco control legislation and policies, assigns only Ds and Fs to the federal government, but says 2008 presents an historic opportunity for Congress to make a dramatic impact on tobacco control across America by authorizing the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to regulate tobacco products. Strong, bipartisan legislation is pending in both the U.S. Senate and U.S. House of Representatives that would give the FDA authority over the manufacture, distribution, marketing and use of tobacco products. The report can be accessed online at http://www.stateoftobaccocontrol.org
"The Congress has an unprecedented opportunity in 2008 to pass this life-saving legislation," said
The American Lung Association's State of Tobacco Control 2007 report tracks progress made, ground lost, and issues that have stalled throughout 2007, during which time two major public health reports — from the President's Cancer Panel and the Institute of Medicine — heralded the need for the federal and state governments to take urgent action to reduce America's tobacco epidemic. The Lung Association's report card grades each of the 50 states, the District of Columbia and
Grades for federal issues — FDA regulation of tobacco products, cigarette tax, cessation policies, and the international tobacco control treaty — still score only Ds and Fs. Congress, however, is poised to pass the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act to give the Food and Drug Administration oversight over tobacco products, legislation that will curb the marketing of cigarettes to children and teens.
"Now is the time for leaders at the federal, state and local levels to summon the political will to do what's right and finally shut the door on this country's tobacco epidemic," said
Twenty-one states, the District of Columbia and
"All workers and business patrons should be protected from breathing toxic secondhand smoke,"
Despite repeated studies proving that well-funded state tobacco prevention and cessation programs keep youth from starting to smoke and motivate smokers to quit, only six states fund these programs at the levels recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Nine states scored an A for funding their programs at 90 percent or more of the CDC's minimum recommended funding level. Thirty-two states, the District of Columbia and
Raising cigarette taxes has motivated thousands of Americans to quit smoking and prevented thousands of kids from starting. Twenty-five states, the District of Columbia, and
"As coalitions all across America fight tooth and nail to tighten laws to protect youth, in particular, tobacco companies are launching new products clearly targeted toward young girls and teens, selling candy-flavored cigarettes, and promoting buy-one-get-one free deals that undermine states' efforts to increase the cost of cigarettes by raising cigarette taxes,"
Data released in 2007 detailed the tobacco industry's spending, including approximately
"The tobacco companies aren't letting up, but we're not letting up either,"
The American Lung Association has helped millions of Americans quit smoking through our Lung HelpLine (1-800-LUNG-USA), and through our smoking cessation programs, including Freedom From Smoking(R), considered to be the "gold standard" of group-setting, smoking cessation programs and Not on Tobacco, or N-O-T, a nationally recognized smoking cessation program for youth.
SOURCE American Lung Association
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