Your article about Mr. Tuttle was most disturbing to me. As a
tobacco chewer I have battled with quitting numerous times, as have my
close friends that chew. I would entertain any suggestions or material
that you could send me to help me and my friends quit this devil weed. I
am ready to lose this habit forever, but am tempted daily by other chewers
that I work very closely with. I truly believe that they want to stop...
Your article about Mr. Tuttle was most disturbing to me. As a
tobacco chewer I have battled with quitting numerous times, as have my
close friends that chew. I would entertain any suggestions or material
that you could send me to help me and my friends quit this devil weed. I
am ready to lose this habit forever, but am tempted daily by other chewers
that I work very closely with. I truly believe that they want to stop,
but are faced with similar stresses. One in particular, our jobs. ATC is
blessed with hours of boredom broken up by moments of terror. A chew
after one of these moments is enevitable. What can you suggest? Please
respond. Thank you, very much.
In researching passive smoking issues for a suggested 'best practice'
model in Australia, I was asked -- no, urged -- by normally sedate and
conservative tobacco control bureaucrats a number of jurisdictions (which
had no legislation to limit smoking in indoor areas) to consider the issue
of smoking in outdoor places of public assembly. This was clearly an
Issue of Public Importance.
In researching passive smoking issues for a suggested 'best practice'
model in Australia, I was asked -- no, urged -- by normally sedate and
conservative tobacco control bureaucrats a number of jurisdictions (which
had no legislation to limit smoking in indoor areas) to consider the issue
of smoking in outdoor places of public assembly. This was clearly an
Issue of Public Importance.
My own experience in the Australian Capital Territory -- where
smokefree indoor air legislation has been in effect since 1994 -- was also
that the public is unhappy about ETS exposure when they attend events at
outdoor venues. I was aware of moves in the USA to prohibit smoking at
such venues, promoted by statement such as, 'We wanted to make this the
best family venue in California.' But in the 'evidence-based policy'
environment of Australia, did this mean that prohibiting or restricting
smoking at these venues is justified on health grounds?
I believe that there is evidence to support the view that, although
people's ETS exposure in venues which are substantially or entirely
unenclosed will normally be less than in enclosed spaces, tobacco smoke
exposure in these circumstances can product symptoms of ill health. These
can be a particular concern for vulnerable individuals such as young
children, pregnant women and people who suffer from allergies and pre-
existing respiratory or cardiovascular conditions.
Particularly in places where smoking in indoor environments is
subject to legislative control, the community accepts (and expects) that
they have a right to be protected from ETS exposure in confined areas. If
this is protection is not provided as a matter of venue policy, there is
no reason that it should not be included in smokefree public places
legislation. Such a provision could refer to restricting or prohibiting
smoking in a place or part of a place where, during an event to which
members of the public are invited or permitted to attend, persons sit or
stand in immediate proximity to each other.
If such legislation also has provisions which require reasonable
steps to be taken to prevent tobacco smoke from penetrating non-smoking
areas, then this should motivate building managers to ensure that outdoor
smoking areas are located well away from building entrances and air
intakes.
Margo Goodin
Director, Tobacco Control Program
ACT Department of Health and Community Care
Canberra
The views expressed are the views of the author and should not be
taken as representatives of the Department or of the ACT Government.
Hello,
Here new my cartoons and photos..
http://www.kamilyavuz.com
Free copy-dounload for you... In the "News" section...
Could you please see...
Here Tobacco company sales car... (This illegal...)
This new photos...
Kamil Yavuz- Anti smoking cartoonist
how will this movie be marketed. can it be purchased by local grass
roots groups trying to show it to underaged youth? if so, who should we
contact and what will it cost?
thanks.
We are seeking information on this, and will post an answer shortly. -ed.
Thanks so much for an excellent article!! We can't be pro-active
enough against the smoking cartel deceivers!!
The MSA volume adjustment provision makes me sick!! How our
government and people have been duped and diced!
I recently read some facts about smoking in China and it said over
300 million in China now living will die prematurely from smoking!! Truly
we have a challenge o...
Thanks so much for an excellent article!! We can't be pro-active
enough against the smoking cartel deceivers!!
The MSA volume adjustment provision makes me sick!! How our
government and people have been duped and diced!
I recently read some facts about smoking in China and it said over
300 million in China now living will die prematurely from smoking!! Truly
we have a challenge on our hands as activists and health educators to help
the young, the gullible, the innocent!
God bless you in your work and may your pen and voice be even more
active in the days and weeks ahead as you seek to be a blessing and help
to others!!
I found your very interesting......and I would very much like to know
how you quit. My husband has been dipping since he was about 14. I hate
it, my children hate it and he has tried to quit many times. It is
interfering in our lives in many ways.....
There are all kinds of things out there to help people to stop
smoking, but i've never seen information suggesting that those who dip
would need help quitting....
I found your very interesting......and I would very much like to know
how you quit. My husband has been dipping since he was about 14. I hate
it, my children hate it and he has tried to quit many times. It is
interfering in our lives in many ways.....
There are all kinds of things out there to help people to stop
smoking, but i've never seen information suggesting that those who dip
would need help quitting.
If anyone out there reads this and has any ideas for me please e-
mail me at carm180@aol.com
I read with interest your article in Tobacco Control "Curbing the
epidemic: governments and the economics of tobacco control".
Within the context of a hedonic pricing model a colleague and I
recently ran a set of regressions relating cigarette prices to their
characteristics (nicotine content, carbon monoxide content, tar level
etc). Primarily the intent was to establish were all...
I read with interest your article in Tobacco Control "Curbing the
epidemic: governments and the economics of tobacco control".
Within the context of a hedonic pricing model a colleague and I
recently ran a set of regressions relating cigarette prices to their
characteristics (nicotine content, carbon monoxide content, tar level
etc). Primarily the intent was to establish were all smokers the "same" or
did sub-groups exist that differed from each other. We have written this
up as a working paper.
We found (not surprisingly) that at least 2 sub-groups existed.
May I ask two questions
1. has anyone considered the possibility of taxing the constituents
of cigarettes - e.g. tar content, carbon monoxide content etc. - as a way
of targeting tobacco effects rather than tobacco per se?
2. ignoring the industry and probable collusion within it - in
theory, does the potential exist to proliferate the variety of cigarettes
available to consumers - in terms of characteristic combinations - and
thereby allow consumers to select bundles that may have less harmful
effects than those they currently smoke?
By inference I am suggesting that these approaches may offer two
further weapons to the arsenal of tobacco control.
I accept of course that there is no such thing as a safe cigarette
and that the preferred option will always be abstinence.
I look forward to hearing your thoughts in due course,
yours sincerely,
Ciaran O'Neill
Ciaran O'Neill (PhD)
Reader in Health Economics and Policy
School of Public Policy, Law and Economics
University of Ulster at Jordanstown
Newtownabbey
Northern Ireland
Thank you so much for your inspiring story. I'm trying to find out
information regarding smokeless tobacco for an institutionwide project I'm
coordinating. We are trying to estimate the amounts/servings of smokeless
tobacco used by patients here. I am not sure how much snuff, smokeless
tobacco, or pipes/cigars smoked would be considered an average daily
amount. It has been difficult to quantify pat...
Thank you so much for your inspiring story. I'm trying to find out
information regarding smokeless tobacco for an institutionwide project I'm
coordinating. We are trying to estimate the amounts/servings of smokeless
tobacco used by patients here. I am not sure how much snuff, smokeless
tobacco, or pipes/cigars smoked would be considered an average daily
amount. It has been difficult to quantify patients' responses for our
form. Thanks very much for your help.
Comprehensive Tobacco Control Strategies Impact Youth and Adults
by
Rick Kropp
Tobacco Prevention and Policy Resources
Santa Rosa, CA
May 1, 1998
Efforts to Prevent and Reduce Youth Smoking Also Help Reduce Adult
Smoking, And Vice Versa
As someone who has been falsely accused for many years of “just”
being a youth access specialist and “just” focusing on youth tobacco
prevention, I have dev...
Comprehensive Tobacco Control Strategies Impact Youth and Adults
by
Rick Kropp
Tobacco Prevention and Policy Resources
Santa Rosa, CA
May 1, 1998
Efforts to Prevent and Reduce Youth Smoking Also Help Reduce Adult
Smoking, And Vice Versa
As someone who has been falsely accused for many years of “just”
being a youth access specialist and “just” focusing on youth tobacco
prevention, I have devoted a great deal of time and thought to those
tobacco advocates who claim that a “youth-focused” tobacco control
strategy is ineffective, neglects larger tobacco issues such as ETS
exposure and adult smoking, and is counter- productive in achieving a
smoke-free society.
I have come to the conclusion these claims really missing the point.
Their proponents fail to see the forest before the trees.
The reality is that these so-called “youth-focused” strategies
support and enhance efforts to reduce adult smoking and nonsmokers’
exposure to ETS, and vice versa.
When someone looks at the wide array of tobacco control policies and
programs in our public health and political arsenal, it becomes quite
clear (at least to me) that all these approaches are interrelated and
mutually supporting of each other.
For sure, many tobacco advocates and elected officials use the
“youth” focus to achieve political and policy goals. And while this may
appear to be an effective strategy, it surely does play into the hands of
the tobacco industry over the long term.
National comprehensive tobacco control strategies include tobacco tax
increases; the regulation of nicotine and tobacco products; eliminating
nonsmokers exposure to ETS; youth tobacco prevention policies such as
youth access laws and their enforcement; youth tobacco prevention
education programs in the schools, home and community; restrictions on
tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship; and cessation programs for
current tobacco users.
In its most basic form, this national strategy addresses three public
health problems: 1) a prevention problem where the goal is stopping
children, teens and young adults from initiating regular tobacco use and
becoming addicted to nicotine through the use of various prevention,
media, education and policy strategies; 2) an addiction problem where the
goal is getting adults and teen tobacco users to quit on their own or
through cessation and relapse prevention programs; and 3) an ETS exposure
problem in the home, family vehicles, all workplaces, enclosed public
places, and public buildings. This national tobacco strategy impacts youth
and adults.
Tobacco prevention strategies such as youth access reduction efforts
impact youth, but also effect adults such as merchants, parents and other
adult family members who are sources of tobacco for minors.
Tobacco prevention strategies such as advertising restrictions impact
youth and adults. The objectives of tobacco advertising and promotion are:
1) market expansion, attracting nonusers to begin smoking and chewing
tobacco, almost entirely minors; but also 2) to encourage tobacco
consumption in three ways: by supporting continuation of smoking by adult
and youth smokers who would otherwise quit; by encouraging adult and youth
quitters to relapse; and by increasing adult and youth smokers’ daily
consumption of cigarettes.
Many other tobacco control strategies and approaches impact youth and
adults. For example, creating and promoting positive parental and family
influences in the home to prevent youth smoking impacts adults as well.
Interventions that promote positive role models for young people in the
community also impact adults. Restricting youth exposure to tobacco
advertising and promotion also impacts adults exposure. Efforts to counter
pro-tobacco influences in the community impact youth and adults. Anti-
tobacco media advertising campaigns can and should impact both youth and
adults.
Eliminating exposure to ETS in the home and family vehicles impacts
both youth and adults. School smoking restrictions apply to and impact
both students and adults. Local and state clean indoor air laws impact
adults and youth. Regulating the labeling, packaging and contents of
tobacco products impacts youth and adults. Increasing tobacco excise taxes
effects the consumption of both youth and adults.
The “youth” versus “adult” tobacco control issue is an inaccurate and
misleading distinction. Broad-based tobacco control programs, for example
our California Prop 99 program, impact youth and adults through
interrelated and mutually supportive activities.
Your article about Mr. Tuttle was most disturbing to me. As a tobacco chewer I have battled with quitting numerous times, as have my close friends that chew. I would entertain any suggestions or material that you could send me to help me and my friends quit this devil weed. I am ready to lose this habit forever, but am tempted daily by other chewers that I work very closely with. I truly believe that they want to stop...
In researching passive smoking issues for a suggested 'best practice' model in Australia, I was asked -- no, urged -- by normally sedate and conservative tobacco control bureaucrats a number of jurisdictions (which had no legislation to limit smoking in indoor areas) to consider the issue of smoking in outdoor places of public assembly. This was clearly an Issue of Public Importance.
My own experience in the Aus...
Enquiries about the Smoke & Mirrors video should be addressed to: docuSmoke@aol.com
how will this movie be marketed. can it be purchased by local grass roots groups trying to show it to underaged youth? if so, who should we contact and what will it cost? thanks. We are seeking information on this, and will post an answer shortly. -ed.
Dear Bill,
Thanks so much for an excellent article!! We can't be pro-active enough against the smoking cartel deceivers!!
The MSA volume adjustment provision makes me sick!! How our government and people have been duped and diced!
I recently read some facts about smoking in China and it said over 300 million in China now living will die prematurely from smoking!! Truly we have a challenge o...
I found your very interesting......and I would very much like to know how you quit. My husband has been dipping since he was about 14. I hate it, my children hate it and he has tried to quit many times. It is interfering in our lives in many ways.....
There are all kinds of things out there to help people to stop smoking, but i've never seen information suggesting that those who dip would need help quitting....
Dear Prof. Chaloupka,
I read with interest your article in Tobacco Control "Curbing the epidemic: governments and the economics of tobacco control".
Within the context of a hedonic pricing model a colleague and I recently ran a set of regressions relating cigarette prices to their characteristics (nicotine content, carbon monoxide content, tar level etc). Primarily the intent was to establish were all...
Dear Jane,
Thank you so much for your inspiring story. I'm trying to find out information regarding smokeless tobacco for an institutionwide project I'm coordinating. We are trying to estimate the amounts/servings of smokeless tobacco used by patients here. I am not sure how much snuff, smokeless tobacco, or pipes/cigars smoked would be considered an average daily amount. It has been difficult to quantify pat...
Comprehensive Tobacco Control Strategies Impact Youth and Adults
by Rick Kropp Tobacco Prevention and Policy Resources Santa Rosa, CA May 1, 1998
Efforts to Prevent and Reduce Youth Smoking Also Help Reduce Adult Smoking, And Vice Versa
As someone who has been falsely accused for many years of “just” being a youth access specialist and “just” focusing on youth tobacco prevention, I have dev...
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