Abstract
Tribune article (Hastings, Nebraska) from March 22, 1963 on a study of the effects of smoking on human health. Questions if the findings of the study should lead to government action and stricter smoking policies in Nebraska. Reports that the Public Healt study puts the $8 billion tobacco industry as well as the "peace of mind" of 65 million smokers in the U.S. at stake. Mentions the possible negative effects of tobacco consumption and that the U.K. has already taken measures to reduce smoking, such as restrictions on cigarette advertising and vending machines. Reports that the only governmental action against cigarettes in the U.S. has been a ban on the distribution of free cigarettes to patients in Air Force hospitals and the inclusion of cigarettes in Air Force lunch boxes. States that the Air Force started to educate its personnel on the relationship between smoking and lung cancer, pulmonary and cardiovascular diseases. Summarizes that there is still controversy about the actual effects of smoking but statistical evidence shows that lung cancer mortality rate is ten times higher for smokers than for nonsmokers.
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Should the government take some kind of ac- ' ' ~', years has campalgne(I vigorously against cig-
tion to discourage smoking of cigarets? This is
one of the major.questions before the Surgeon
. General's Advisory Committee on Smoking and
Health, which has just embarked on a study of
all available scientific data on the effects of
: smoking on human health, ~ 1:
Killed in the Nebraska Legislature Tuesday
was' a bill which would-require that cigarets
s~ "sold in the state be labeled hazardous to human
-health. Reports were that the proposal had at=
tracted wide-spread attention. Nebraska also
receives a sizeable amount of revenue from the
sales tax that is now imposed on cigarets.
: At stake in the Public Health Service study is
the well-being of an $8 billion industry which
utilizes a major agricultural product and yields
$3 billion a year in federal and state tax reve
nues. I At stake also is the peace of mind of 65
million habitual smokers In the United States
who seem unable or unwilling to give up cigr
aret smoking despite mounting evidence that it
-has something to do with the Incidence of lung
cancer,, other respiratory diseases and heart
trouble.
: After publication of a report on the question
:by Royal College of Physicians last March,
Great Britain imposed restrictions on cigaret
advertising and ordered removal of cigaret
vending machines from places where they would
.-be accessible to juveniles. In the United States
the only_ governmental action taken against
.,cigarets to date has been a ban on distribution
of free cigarets to patients in Air Force hos-
pitals rind a ban on inclusion of cigarets In
_;lunch boxes packed for Air Force personnel on
-long flights. Air Force Surgeon GeneraU Oliver
K. Niess told a recent meeting of the Associa-
tion of Military Surgeons that the Air Force
was now educating its people on "the relation-
ship between cigaret smoking and lung can-
cer, pulmonary diseases and cardiovascular dis-
eases."
.-The effect of smoking on health is still a
matter of scientific controversy, anh it is likely
to remain so until the origin of dread diseases
like cancer and heart trouble Is fully under-
stood. The Public Health Service has stuck to
the 1959 'statement of then Surgeon General
Leroy E. Burney that "The weight of evidence
.- implicates smoking as the principal ...
factor in the increased incidence of lung can-
cer." The American Cancer Society for several
TZ i I BUTNE
Hastings, Nebraska
March 22, 1963
- ~ .
:~-
PPublic Health Servi.c,e~.Study May Shed
: .
ight on Cigaret Smoking Controversy
-
t aret smoking, especially among. young people.
Mainstay of the cigaret's deferisii is the Scien-
'tific Advisory Board of the Tobacco Industry
Research Committee, established in 1954 when
-..cigaret sales dropped off temporarily in re-
sponse to a cancer scare.
-: The major evidence against the cigaret is sta-
.tistical. A number of studies made over the
past 15 years links high mortality, especially
from lung cancer, to cigaret smoking. A Public
Health Service study of 200,000 World War I
veterans showed the lung cancer mortality rate
to be 10 times higher for smokers than non-
smokers; the more heavily the individual
smoked, the more likely he was to be attacked
by this disease. The correlation applied solely
to cigaret smoking; the mortality rates for
cigar and pipe smokers were only sliglltly
higher than for non-smokers. Similar results
were shown by American Cancer Society studies.
' Some scientists have insisted, however, that
statistical correlations do not prove a cause-
and-effect relationship. They say that they
overlook other factors-previous infections, air
pollution,. heredity - which haye also been
shown to have a high correlation with lung
cancer mortality.
Tobacco smoking has been under attack on
grounds of health and morals ever since the
product was introduced to the civilized world
400 years ago. Kings, popes, muftis and a Rus,
sian czar condemned smoking in the 17th cen-
tury, But mankind took to tobacco and govern-
ments in time began to profit from taxing a
booming Industry. Nevertheless, anti-cigaret re-
formers in the United States -became influen-
tial enough in the late 19th~ and early 20thh
centuries to obtain legal bans on the sale of
cigarets in as many as 14 states at one time or
another.
The controversy today differs from that of
earlier times in that it is being fought out by
means of scientific research, although the argu
ments are still often fraught with emotion and
prejudice. Considering man's firm attachment
to the smoking habit, it has been suggested
that research be directed to locating harmful
ingredients and eradicating them from cigarets.
Unfortunately, the very ingredients which are
Implicated are the ones which contribute most
to the satisfactions found in smoking.
