Lorillard
to Smoke or Not to Smoke: A Really Free Choice for Our Young People
Fields
- Author
- Califano, J.A., J.R.
- Area
- LEGAL DEPT FILE ROOM
- Alias
- 03745214/03745215
- Type
- NEWS, NEWSPAPER ARTICLE
- Named Organization
- American Cancer Society
- Los Angles Times
- Who, World Health Org
- Los Angles Times
- Named Person
- Surgeon General
- Document File
- 03745010/03745447/Hew's Anti Smoking Campaign Vol 1 2 790100 - 790523.
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- Request
- R1-004
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Author (Organization)
- Acs World
- Hew, Dept of Health Education and Welfare
- Characteristic
- MARG, MARGINALIA
- Master ID
- 03745010/5826
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Document Images
V" QE -t - ey/ d
by JOSEPH A. CALIFANO, Jt.
Secretary of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, US.A.
THS new Program on Smoking and
Health that I, announced earlier this
year is based on the premise that the
only free choice is a fully informed
choice. Its central objective is to
provide the American- people-and- a
pecially our young people-with the in-
fotmation they need to make a genu-
inely free choice about smoking and
their own health,
Cigarette smoking is the primary
preventable cause of disease and pre-
mature death, in the United' Stata.
Although we have made real progress
against smoking since the 1964 Report
of the Surgeon General on Smoking
and Health, that progress has occurred
almost entirely among adults. Between
1968 and 1974, the number of teenage
smokers increased by 50 percent-from
3 million to 4.5 million: During that
same period, the percentage of teenage
girls who-smoke more than doubled,
so that the difference in smoking rates
between teenage girls and boys has vir
tually disappeared. The rate of teenage
smoking is apparently on!the rise, and
young people are starting to smoke at
even younger ages. A study in one ma-
jor urban area in Los Angeles shows
one out of 20 children smoking at age
11. It shows that one year later-at age
12-one out oJS children smoke.
These figures are deeply disturb-
ing in two major respects. First, we
know that more than 75 percent of all'
current smokers started before their
21 st birthday. We also know- that the
bat wayao stop smoking is not to start-
smoking in thrfirst place. Anyone who
smokes, or who has ever smoked,,
knows how hard it is to kick the habit:
Thus, the rise in the rate and number
of; teenage smokers could well mean a
similar rise in adult smoking in the
years ahead. Second, we know that
smoking during pregnancy has adverse
effects on the fetus. We also know that
smokers who use birth control pills face
a far higher risk of heart disease than
pill takers who do not smoke. For these
reasons, we must be especially alarmed
at the smoking rise among teenage girls.
All of these facts underscore the
urgency and importance of doing a far
better job than we have done thus far
47

(
of making certain that.every young per-
son really understands what the risks
are when he or she decides to smoke or
not to smoke. Recently, for example,
the Los Angeles Times ran a story on
smoking among local high school stu-
dents. I suspect that any adult who
smokes, or used to smoke, would under-
stand and empathize with the anguished
cry of one 16-year-old boy quoted in
that story who started smoking when
he was ten. "There's nothing, this young
man said, "about cigarettes that I like.
I would do anything if I could quit.
I remember it was the big thing to do
when I started. Now I smoke because
I have to. I can tell you this: I'm not
proud to be a smoker."
cont. from p.11
International Conference
convince our governments not to
export tobacco and we must sup-
port the World Health Organiza-
tion in its efforts to discourage
tobacco cultivation and use: It
seems ironic that WHO has or-
ganized risk factor projects to
help people quit smoking in the
developed countries, while little is
done to prevent people from start-
Most of the new program on
smoking and health is aimed at young
people like that-at finding out what
influences them to smoke or not to
smoke and what are the most effective
ways of enabling them to make a fully
informed-and thus fully free-choice.
Far from coercing these young people,,
the new program seeks to counter the
pervasive and powerful pressures with-
in our society which persuade these
young people that smoking is the attrac-
tive, the "in" thing, to do.
That is an effort that deserves-
andi in the last analysis. depends upon
-the active support of those adults who,
by their example, exert such an enor-
mous influence upon the behavior of
our young people.
The proceedings of the Interna-
tional Conference on Smoking Cessa-
tion wi7t be publishe& by the American
Cancer Society under the title, Progress
in Smoking Cessation, in early 1979.
Write to the Public Education Depart-
ment. American Cancer Society, 777
Third Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017,
U.S.A.
'ing to smoke in the developingg
countries.
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