Lorillard
Statement by William H. Foege, M.D. Director, Center for Disease Control Before the Subcommittee on Health and Scientific Research Committee on Human Resources United States Senate
Fields
- Author
- Foege, W.H.
- Type
- NEWS, NEWSPAPER ARTICLE
- SPCH, SPEECH/PRESENTATION
- Alias
- 03603539/03603556
- Area
- LEGAL DEPT FILE ROOM
- Site
- N14
- Request
- R1-004
- R1-037
- Named Person
- Califano
- Kretchmer, N.
- Pertschuk
- Pinney, J.M.
- Richmond
- Soloman
- Surgeon General
- Kretchmer, N.
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- Named Organization
- Comm on Human Resources
- Federal Communication Comm
- Ftc, Federal Trade Commission
- General Services Administration
- Natl Center for Health Statistics
- Natl Clearinghouse for Smoking + He
- Natl Inst of Child Health + Human D
- Natl Interagency Council on Smoking
- New England Journal of Medicine
- NIH, Natl Inst of Health
- Office of Education
- Office on Smoking + Health
- Subcomm on Health + Scientific Rese
- Treas, Dept of the Treasury
- Center for Disease Control
- Federal Communication Comm
- Author (Organization)
- Hew, Dept of Health Education and Welfare
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Master ID
- 03603272/4564
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Document Images
C
3
The oroblem of smoking and health is urgent because:
* smoking causes at least 80 percent of all lung
cancer deaths and is the number one cancer killer
among men and fast approaching number one among
women;
^ smoking is also a primary contributor to cardio-
vascular disease, the nation's single largest
cause of untimely death;
* smoking results in a growing burden of death and
disability due to emphysema and chronic bronchitis--
diseases that turn the prime of life into premature
old age.
These distressing facts do not need to continue into
the future. These statistics can be reversed.
Nor do we need to continue to suffer the enormous
economic consequences of cigarette smoking. Just two
months ago an article in the New England Journal of
Medicine suggested that the costs of cigarette smoking
are more than $8 billion annually in direct medical
costs and nearly $20 billion more in lost production and
other costs. _,
As this Committee so well knows, personal health
care expenditures have been rising at wildly inflationary
rates and reached $142.8 billion last year. It would ~
appear from the New England Journal estimates that some- d-
W
thing more than five percent of these costs are directly CP
attributable to cigarette smoking. ~

STATEMENT
BY
DEPARTMENT OF' HEALTH. EDUCr1T1O'NI. AND WELFARE
WILLZAM Fi. FOEGE, M.D.
DIRECTOR, CENTER'FOR DISEASE CONTROL,
BEFORE' THE
SUBCOMMITTEE ON fiEALTH AND SCTENTIFIC' RESEARCH'.
COMMITTEE ON HUIMAN RESOURCES
UNITED STATES SENATEI
FOR IRELEASE Oy'LY' ON DELIVERY'
E,
THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1979

c
MR. CHARIMAN AND MEMBERS OF THE SUBCOMMITTEE :
I appreciate this opportunity to appear before you this
morning and to present our Department's view on the
Smoking Deterrence Act of 1978, S. 3118. I would like
to introduce to you the two witnesses who accompany me,
Dr. Norman Kretchmer, who is Director of the National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development, and
Mr. John M. Pinney, the Director of our Department's
new Office on Smoking and Health.
This legislation,as a major component of your National
Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Act (S. 3115),
seeks to advance the Nation's health by focusing on ways
of preventing illness, ways of keeping people out of
hospitals, and ways of preventing unnecessary disease
and avoiding premature death. On behalf of Secretary
Califano and Assistant Secretary Richmond, I congratulate
you for the leadership you have shown in this area. We
share your deep interest in improving the preventive
components of our health strategy. it
0

- 2 -
The concept of health care in this country has for too
long been dominated by the images of doctors, hospitals,
and the acutely ill. Prevention, as well as treatment,
is a vital element in our Nation's health care system.
S. 3115 is broad and covers many aspects of health care
and disease prevention and touches on many programs now
conducted by the Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare and by State and local governments.
We will
comment on this comprehensive legislation in detail at a
later date. Tcday I would speak to the particular hea lth
problem of cigarette smoking and express my own personal
gratification for the endorsement which S. 3118 provides
to the Department's smoking and health initiative.
It seems unnecessary, Mr. Chairman, for me to speak
at length here of the needwess toll of disease and death
exacted by cigarette smoking. You have demonstrated
again and again your commitment to prevention. As one
so committed, you are aware that cigarette smoking
remains the single most urgent and potentially rewarding
target for preventive action. As Secretary Califano
phrased it in his address of January 11, when he announced
our Department's smoking and health initiative, it is
Public Health Enemy Number One.

It is extremely difficult, of course, to assess
the impact of the warning label, both on cigarette
packages and in advertising. A continuing reminder--
seen over and over again, wherever cigarettes are.
being promoted--may, in conjunction with other messages,
help some smokers form the determination to quit and
act upon it. Certainly it can be argued that some form
of official warning is not only appropriate, but *
necessary in discharging the Government's responsibility.
The ten separate warning messages would attract
greater interest, through both novelty and variety,
than the single message now used. Several of them--
for example, the one on damage to the unborn child--
would have the further advantage of calling attention
to specific threats that. may not yet be widely recognized.
If the decision is made to require a variety of
messages, the specific wori ing of each needs to be
carefully considered. I would hope that the conditional
"may be" could be avoided, and that, in every case where
the evidence is supportive, that the force of the statement
"is dangerous" could be retained. I would emphasize
that warnings should be required in advertising, as
well as on packages. ..

- 9 -
Section 9 of S. 3118 would require that all cigarette
packages list the tar and nicotine yield of the cigarette.
It would also substitute for the current warning -- "The
Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking
Is Dangerous to Your Health" a set of ten different warnings,
each of which would be-required to appear on ten percent
of all cigarette packages.
Tar and nicotine levels should, in our opinion, be
listed on the cigarette packages. We would suggest,
however, that provision be made for:
-- inclusion of the information in all advertising,
as well as on the package; and
-- listing of other hazardous compounds as they
may be identified in the future by the Secretary
of Health, Education, and welfare, and determined
through appropriate testing methodology by the
Federal Trade Commission.
One of the elements in cigarette smoke that may
have significant effect on health is carbon monoxide.
Yesterday, Chairman Pertschuk of the Federal Trade
Commission informed Secretary Califano that the
Commission will begin testing domestic cigarettes for
their carbon monoxide levels, and will begin pubi~ishing
the results early in 1979. The Chairman's letter
announcing this important action will also be submitted
for the record. The Department, through its Office on
Smoking and Health, will give wide publicit_v to the
results of these tests.

To coorrdinate this effort, the Secretary has
established the Office on Smokingiand Health and hass
a knowledge of', andt commitment to prevention and
health education.
manager and analyst of health programs~, and possesses
appointed' Mr. Pinney as its Director. Mr. Pinney
brings to this position ten years experience as a
permitted,as well as areas in which smokers and non-
j=isdiction are listed in which smoking will not bee
of S. 3118' deal with the regulation of' smoking in Federal
facilities. Specific areas of facilities under Federal
One of the important elements in the Department's
initiative is to move further in protectingithe rights
and health of those who do not smoke. The first provisions
Soloman will also be submitted!for the record. Clearly
new regulations allready promulgated within HEW,~which
am submitting for the record'. We have urged other
Department and Agency heads, and organizations, such
as the General Services Administration, to adopt and'
enforce similar restrictions in the facilities uAtier
their control. A copy of my letter to Administrator
These provisions correspond very closely withithe
non-compliance.
smokers must. be separated'. It also provides instruments
for enforcement of these restrictions and sanctions for

this policy to other public agencies, as we11 as organiza-
the 50 States for their consideration in efforts to
We have circulated a model "Clean Indoor Air" bill to
tions~,in the pr~ilvate~ sector for th~~e: ir review.
protect the non-smoker.
to notify World War II shipyard workers and'other asbestos
review of' the medi:cal and behavioral aspects of smoking
since the original Surgeon General''s report of 1964.
The Department is now engaged in a nationwide effort
Agencies and work has begun on the preparation of'the 1979
S'urgeon General's report. This will be the most extensive
Dr. Richmond1has assigned'responsibilities among the
workers of the heaSthirisks they face.
exposed to asbestos,
contracting,llung,cancer as a non-smoker who has not been
exposed to asbestos has up to 90'times the risk of
This campaignn
emphasizes that an individual who smokes and who has been
therapeutic drugs~. One important interaction recently
reported was the combined effect of smoking; and oral
the published reports on the interaction of smoking with
The Food andiD'rug; Administraltion is now reviewing
contraceptives which produces a marked increase in cardio-
vascular disease and deaiths. Warning notices must now
accompany all such pills when they are first prescribed
to the patient.

It was because of the human and dollar costs of'
smoking,that Secretary Calif'ano announced the Department"s
initiative on smoking and health on January 11. Under
ob j ectives of S. 3118.
the Department--all of which we believe addres.s the
this initiative, a number of steps have been taken by
Together with the Federal Trade Commission, the
audience. This petition is now being considered by
the FCC.
the information would be made available to the widest
public service announcements,, including,prime time, where
Department has petitioned the Federal Communication
C~ommis,s~ion toopen~ more broadcast~,o~pp~~ortunit~ie~s for
have sent additional information and digests of'smoking
Secretary Callifano and Commissioner of Education Boyer
and' educational materials to the chief school offices
the 501 States and to all 16,000' school districts. Dr. Boyer
has also invitedichildren from all ouer.r the country to
and shuttle buses, and calls for separate work areas for
The Department has drafted a new policy on fmoking
in HEW-occupied build'ing,s, which bans smoking in,
conference rooms, classrooms, auditoriums, elevators
send us posters and essays on their feelings about
smoking.
smokers and no-n-smokers, where practical. We have submitted

In summary, Mr. Chairman, the Department is deeply gratified
by the continuing support of this Subcommittee for disease
prevention, particularly efforts aimed at smoking and health.
As you knowi the Department presently has broad authority
in thi:s area and has recently undertaken a major initiative
aimed at objectives that closely parallel those of S. 3'11&..
While in many instances, specific authority may not be
required to advance our mutual goals, this expression of'
support from the Congress will significantly aid our efforts.
