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New CDC Study: Well-Funded Tobacco Control Programs Can Reduce Number of Smokers by Millions
Statement of William V. Corr, Executive Director, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids
WASHINGTON,
As state legislatures across the country convene their 2008 sessions, an important new study provides powerful evidence of the direct relationship between increased funding for state tobacco prevention and cessation programs and declines in adult smoking.
The study, being published in the
The new study was conducted by researchers at the CDC and RTI International, an independent nonprofit research institute based in Research Triangle Park, N.C. The study adds to earlier research, using similar methods, which demonstrated the same type of relationship between program spending and youth smoking declines. These studies, along with reviews by the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies of Sciences, the President's Cancer Panel and numerous other experts demonstrate conclusively that state tobacco prevention and cessation programs work to prevent kids from smoking and help adults quit, thereby saving lives and health care dollars.
This overwhelming evidence that state tobacco prevention and cessation programs work and deliver so many health and financial benefits leaves elected leaders with no excuse for failing to fund such programs in every state at CDC-recommended levels. The decision should be an easy one:
— The problem is huge and warrants urgent action. Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of death in the U.S, resulting in 400,000 premature deaths and costing the nation nearly
— We know the solution works. Comprehensive, well-funded state tobacco prevention and cessation programs are highly effective, especially when combined with higher tobacco taxes and smoke-free workplace laws.
— States have the revenue. The states will collect about
— The public supports it. Poll after poll shows that Americans strongly believe tobacco settlement and tax dollars should be spent on tobacco prevention.
States with well-funded programs have reported strong success. Washington state, with a well-funded tobacco prevention and cessation program, has reduced adult smoking by 24 percent since it launched the program in 1999. Washington's dramatic decline in adult smoking translates to more than 230,000 fewer smokers in the state, saving about
Despite the overwhelming evidence that state tobacco prevention and cessation programs are highly effective when they are funded appropriately, only three states currently fund these programs at even the minimum level recommended by the CDC (http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/reports/settlements/). This is part of the reason that declines in both youth and adult smoking in the
The CDC recently updated its recommendations to the states for funding and implementing tobacco prevention and cessation programs, taking into account new scientific evidence, state experiences and cost factors such as inflation and population increases since last issuing its recommendations in 1999 (see CDC's Best Practices for Comprehensive Tobacco Control Programs - 2007 at www.cdc.gov/tobacco/tobacco_control_programs/stateandcommunity/best_practices/index.htm). The new study should spur state legislatures and governors to heed the CDC's call for greater investment in programs proven to reduce smoking, save lives, and save money.
(A state-by-state chart of CDC's updated spending recommendations can be found at http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/docs/CDC_recommended_funding.pdf.)
SOURCE Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids



