Lorillard
Fields
- Author
- Califano, J.A., J.R.
- Area
- LEGAL DEPT FILE ROOM
- Alias
- 03763621/03763622
- Type
- LETT, LETTER
- Named Person
- Surgeon General
- Named Organization
- FDA, Food and Drug Administration
- Federal Communications Commission
- Ftc, Federal Trade Commission
- Hew, Dept of Health Education and Welfare
- Office on Smoking + Health
- Public Health Service
- Civil Aeronautics Board
- Recipient
- Oneill, T.P.
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- 03764046-4102 The Health Consequences of Smoking Part 2 of 2
Document Images
,
S
THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH. EDUCATION. AND WELFARE
WASHINGTON. O. C. 20201
c
The Honorable Thomas P. O'Neill
Speaker of the House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515
!=!`"' Dear Mr. Speaker:
. As required by Section 8(a) of the Public Health Cigarette Smoking
' Act of 1969, I am submitting the 1977-191S~revert on the health
--consequences of smoking. The report includes the "Bibliography on
Smoking and Health--1976," the "Bibliography on Smoking and Health--
1977," and "The Health Consequences of Smoking, 1977-1978." The report
-bears a 2-year designation in order to return the series to an annual
timetable which was altered because of the time required for the clear-
ance processing of the 1976 report. The Bibliographies are prepared
-annually and routinely to reflect the new acquisitions to the smoking-
and health data base which operates at a cost of $200,000.00 per year;
the health consequences of smoking report, which is a review of this
new current information and prepared specifically for Congress, this
year cost $9,800.00.
"The Health Consequences of Smoking, 1977-1978" includes recently pub-
lished data from three classic prospective studies of the mortality re-
sulting from cigarette smoking. These studies, involving almost one and
a half million persons, continue to document excess mortality among
smokers as compared to nonsmokers.
This part of the report also includes data on the established risks of
low birth weight and increased perinatal mortality for offspring of women
who smoke during pregnancy. In addition, the new evidence is reviewed
that shows not only a high rate of heart attacks among women who smoke
cigarettes, but that this effect is particularly critical in women who
use oral contraceptives.
The data in this report indicate that former smokers show lower death
rates than continuing smokers and within 10 to 15 years after quitting
come close to the low rates of those who never smoked.
O
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Page 2 - The Honorable Thomas P. O'Neill
One study supports previous evidence that there is a partial solution
to the health problem in the use of cigarettes with lower emissions of
"tar" and nicotine.
As a result of public demand and a responsive industry, there has been
over recent years a continuing decline in the emissions of "tar" and
nicotine in cigarettes in use.
The data in this report and in previous annual reviews of the health
consequences of smoking have established cigarette smoking as a habit re-
sponsible for an overwhelming level of premature death and disability in
this country. To reduce this preventable and costly mortality and
morbidity, this Department recently announced a new antismoking program.
The program is one of public education, regulation, and research with
special emphasis on children, teenagers, and young women, and on occu-
pations where smoking increases risks from occupational exposure. In
undertaking this program, I have invited the cooperation of the major
broadcast networks, State and local school officials, the major corporations
of this Nation, State Governors and legislators, the Federal Trade Commis-
sion, the Federal Communications Commission, the Civil Aeronautics Board,
and others whose involvement and cooperation are crucial to the success
of this program. In response to the evidence linking the combined use
of oral contraceptives and cigarette smoking, the Food and Drug Admin-
istration, Public Health Service, HEW, has recently required that a warning
statement to that effect accompany oral contraceptives as they are dis-
tributed to those who use them. To provide leadership and to coordinate
this program, an Office on Smoking and Health has been established in the
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health. As one of its first tasks,
this Office will coordinate the production of a comprehensive document
which reviews not only the biomedical but also the behavioral and control
data about smoking and its effects on health. The report will be submitted
to Congress in January 1979.
As the principal health officials of this government, the Surgeon General
and I are committed to fulfilling our responsibilities to provide infor-
mation and direction to permit American citizens to make genuinely free
choices about smoking and their own health. In this regard and as I am
required by P.L. 91-222 to make such legislative recommendations that I
deem appropriate based on the scientific data about the impact of smoking
