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Smokeless tobacco, cigars, and pipes also have deadly consequences, including lung, larynx, esophageal, and oral cancer. Low-tar cigarettes and novel tobacco products such as bidis and clove cigarettes are not safe alternatives.
The harmful effects of smoking do not end with the smoker. Babies of women who smoke during pregnancy are more likely to have lower birth weights, an increased risk of death from sudden infant death syndrome, and respiratory distress. In addition, secondhand smoke has harmful effects on nonsmokers. Each year, primarily because of exposure to secondhand smoke, an estimated 3,000 nonsmoking Americans die of lung cancer, and more than 35,000 die of heart disease. An estimated 150,000–300,000 children younger than 18 months of age have respiratory tract infections because of exposure to secondhand smoke.
Although smoking rates fell among high school students from 2000 to 2002, they did not decline significantly among middle school students. This lack of progress suggests the need for greater use of proven anti-smoking strategies and for new strategies to promote further declines in youth smoking.
442,398 U.S. Deaths Attributable Each Year to Cigarette Smoking*
*Average annual number of deaths, 1995–1999.
Source: CDC. Annual
smoking-attributable mortality, years of potential life lost, and economic costs—United
States—1995–1999. MMWR 2002;51(14):300–3.
[A text description of this graph is also available.]
Actual Causes of Death, United States, 1990*
*The percentages used in this figure are composite approximations derived from published scientific studies that attributed deaths to these causes. Source: McGinnis JM, Foege WH. Actual causes of death in the United States. JAMA 1993;270:2207–12.
[A text description of this graph is also available.]
CDC’s Tobacco Control FrameworkWith fiscal year 2004 funding of approximately $100 million, the Office on Smoking and Health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) provides national leadership for a comprehensive, broad-based approach to reducing tobacco use. A variety of government agencies, professional and voluntary organizations, and academic institutions have joined together to advance this comprehensive approach, which involves
Essential elements of this approach include state- and community-based interventions, counter-marketing, policy development, surveillance, and evaluation. These activities target groups—such as young people, racial and ethnic minority groups, people with low incomes or low levels of education, and women—at highest risk for tobacco-related health problems. In addition, CDC is focusing on four strategic priorities for accelerating progress toward a tobacco-free future:
Sustaining State ProgramsCDC continues to support basic implementation programs to prevent and control tobacco use in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, seven territories, and seven tribal-servicing organizations. In addition, CDC funds nine national networks to reduce tobacco use among eight priority populations. CDC also provides grants to 18 states for coordinated school health programs to help prevent tobacco use. CDC provides technical assistance and training to help states plan, establish, and evaluate tobacco control programs. Recent fiscal crises have dramatically eroded states’ investment in tobacco control. From 2001 through 2003, the money that states spent on tobacco control fell 28%. Total funding is down to $541 million, or less than 3% of the more than $19 billion that the states received in 2003 from tobacco excise taxes and tobacco settlement payments. As of September 2003, 23 states have had to cut staffing, media campaigns, quitlines, and community programs because of loss of funding for tobacco control. Some of the biggest cuts have struck the most successful state programs, including those in California, Florida, Massachusetts, and Oregon. CDC is working with national partners to help states maintain their core capacity and infrastructure for tobacco control so that they can revitalize their programs once funding is restored. New CDC resources for states include Introduction to Program Evaluation for Comprehensive Tobacco Control Programs, Designing and Implementing an Effective Tobacco Counter-Marketing Campaign, the Taking Action Against Secondhand Smoke online toolkit, and the National Tobacco Control Program State Exchange Web site. Expanding the Science BaseCDC is responsible for conducting and coordinating research, surveillance, laboratory, and evaluation activities related to tobacco and its impact on health. For example,
Capitalizing on Unique Opportunities for Research and CollaborationCommunicating Information to the PublicCDC researches, develops, and distributes tobacco and health information nationwide. CDC responds to over 100,000 tobacco-related requests annually, 60,000 of which come through the Internet. In the past year, CDC distributed more than 800,000 publications and video products. In addition, visits to CDC’s tobacco control Web site increased from 2 million in 2001 to more than 3 million in 2003. CDC has provided these materials and resources to educators, employers, pastors, public health workers, and other community leaders working to prevent people from starting to use tobacco, garner support for clean indoor air and other policy changes, and help those who use tobacco to quit. Through its Media Campaign Resource Center (MCRC), CDC continues to provide counter-advertising materials and technical assistance to help state and local programs conduct effective media campaigns. The MCRC helps states stretch their media budgets by using and adapting existing ads rather than creating new ones. In addition, CDC released Designing and Implementing an Effective Tobacco Counter-Marketing Campaign in 2003 to help state and local programs establish an integrated public education program. In partnership with other federal, state, and local agencies, CDC communicates key tobacco messages through the media, schools, and communities. A new resource to promote quitting smoking and community involvement in tobacco control among African Americans is Pathways to Freedom. CDC also works with the sports and entertainment industries to communicate its tobacco-free message. Promoting Action Through PartnershipsCDC works with a variety of national and international partners to ensure that diverse groups are involved in tobacco control efforts. For example,
Future DirectionsTo provide strategic guidance to help state tobacco control programs overcome many of the funding challenges they face, CDC is redoubling its efforts in surveillance and evaluation, health communications, program services, and policy analysis. CDC will work to help policy makers, health officials, and the U.S. public understand that tobacco control is a core component of public health that needs to be defended and sustained if the nation is to reduce the terrible toll of death and disease from tobacco use. |
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Policy | Accessibility This page last reviewed August 10, 2004 United
States Department of Health and Human Services |
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