California Anti-Smoking Laws Save Thousands Of Lives, New Study Finds
Main Category: Smoking / Quit SmokingAlso Included In: Public Health
Article Date: 03 Mar 2007 - 0:00 PDT
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More than 50,000 lives will have been saved by the year 2010 in California because of statewide tobacco control policies. That's according to a new study that also estimates smoking rates among Californians dropped by 25 percent due to higher cigarette prices, ramped up media campaigns, clean air laws and reducing youth access to cigarettes. California was the first state to pass such strong anti-tobacco policies statewide.
"In the year 2010 alone over 5,000 lives will be saved as a result of the California Tobacco Control Program," said study author David Levy, Ph.D., a senior research scientist at PIRE Public Services Research Institute. "As the first state to successfully initiate a comprehensive plan to 'denormalize' tobacco, California serves as a benchmark for other states."
In 1988, voters passed Prop. 99 that increased cigarette taxes by 25 cents per pack and one quarter of that revenue increase paid for the California Tobacco Control Program (CTCP). The program was initially directed at increasing smoking cessation, but later targeted its efforts at reducing exposure to environmental smoke, reducing youth access to cigarettes, and countering pro-tobacco messages. The specific CTCP elements included a statewide mass media campaign, competitive grants program, school-based prevention and cessation programs, community programs and coalitions, health care provider education, restrictions on marketing, and clean indoor air law.
"Tobacco control policies implemented as comprehensive tobacco control strategies undoubtedly saves lives. They have significantly impacted smoking rates," Dr. Levy said. "Further tax increases should lead to more lives saved, and additional policies may continue to reduce smoking rates, and consequently reduce smoking-related health problems in the population."
The study estimates the change in adult smoking rates and smoking-related deaths with these new policies in place individually and as a group after controlling for other trends. The research is based on SimSmoke, a computer simulation of tobacco control policy effects developed by Dr. Levy that can be programmed for use in countries and states. SimSmoke projects smoking trends over time, and traces the impact of tobacco control policies and smoking habits on death rates.
Dr. Levy has a PhD in economics from U.C.L.A. and is a Senior Research Scientist for PIRE (Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation.) He has published over 100 papers, including articles in the American Economic Review, American Journal of Public Health, JAMA, Medical Care, and Review of Economics and Statistics. He has also written numerous government reports on tobacco control policy, alcohol control policy, and cost outcome analysis.
Dr. Levy has been principal investigator of grants from the National Institutes of Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, the World Health Organization. This study was funded by the Tobacco-Related Disease Research Foundation and the National Cancer Institute. Currently, Dr. Levy is working on a grant from the National Cancer Institute that looks at the effect of tobacco control policies on lung cancer rates, and examines the effect of tobacco control policies implemented by various states.
Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation
http://www.pire.org/
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (2)
Tell Us Where These Laws Originated
posted by Joshua Juengel on 21 May 2007 at 12:28 pmYou know as well intentioned as you anti-smokers are, why don't you let the public in on the fact that every single one of these laws here in California orginated in Nazi Germany. Why don't you tell the public that Hitler BELIEVED that tobacco was "the wrath of the red-man against the white-man, vengeance for having been given hard liquor." (http://constitutionalistnc.tripod.com/hitler-leftist/id1.html). Read these shocking parallels and compare them to the endless lecturing we are forced to endure today about our personal lifestyle choices by the state and their propaganda arm, the mass media.
- The Nazis banned tobacco advertising and financed huge public relations campaigns to propagandize people into giving up smoking.
- The Nazis banned smoking in government offices, civic transport, university campuses, rest homes, post offices, many restaurants and bars, hospital grounds and workplaces, and Hitler gave awards to associates who quit the habit.
- A ban on smoking in private vehicles was called for. San Francisco is trying for this ban as we speak.
- The Nazi Reich Health Office warned that smoking caused impotence and produced posters depicting smoking as a dirty habit of Jews, Gypsies, blacks, intellectuals and Indians.
- Nazi lobbyists lectured terrified children in schools on the horrors of racial impurity as a result of smoking.
- The term "passive smoking" (Passivrauchen) was coined by the Nazi Anti-Tobacco League. Its author, Fritz Lickint, offered no supporting evidence to claim that smokers poisoned everyone around them, while also stating that drinking coffee caused cancer.
- Hitler was an ardent vegetarian and did not smoke or drink after the age of 30, even accrediting the rise of fascism to his success in kicking the habit. He forbade anyone from smoking in a room he might enter. Fellow fascist leaders Mussolini, Napoleon and Franco also detested smoking.
- The Nazi anti-smoking crusade was unleashed with the help of manufactured junk science on behalf of the medical and health establishment, one such example being that smoking caused "spontaneous abortions" in pregnant women.
- Hitler attempted to price out smoking for Germans, levying huge taxes on cigarettes.
- Despite the Nazi propaganda crusade against smoking, tobacco sales increased in Germany, leading some history professors to hypothesize that smoking was an act of cultural resistance against fascism, until the late 1930's after smoking was banned in most public buildings and tobacco sales rapidly declined. {Source:http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/april2007/250407antismoking.htm,
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7 Bauer D. So lebt der Duce. Auf der Wacht 1937:19-20.
8 Picker H. Hitlers Tischgesprache im Fuhrerhauptquartier.Bonn: Athenaum Verlag, 1951.
9 Lee PN, ed. Tobacco consumption in various countries. 4th ed. London: Tobacco Research Council, 1975.
10 Reid G. Weltanschauung, Haltung, Genussgifte.Genussgifte1939;35:64.
11 Kosmos. Bild-Dokumente unserer Zeit.Dresden: Kosmos,1933.
12 Reckert FK. Tabakwarenkunde: Der Tabak, sein Anbau undseine Verarbeitung.Berlin-Schoneberg: Max Schwabe, 1942.
13 Erkennung und Bekampfung der Tabakgefahren. DtschArztebl 1941;71:183-5.
14 Klarner W. Vom Rauchen: Eine Sucht und ihre Bekampfung.Nuremberg: Rudolf Kern, 1940.
15 Rauchverbot fur die Polizei auf Strassen und in Dienstraumen. Die Genussgifte1940;36:59.
16 Berlin: alcohol, tobacco and coffee. JAMA 1939;113:1144-5.
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18 Mitteilungen. Off Gesundheitsdienst 1941;7:488.
19 Charman T. The German home front 1939-1945. London: Barrie & Jenkins, 1989.
20 Fromme W. Offentlicher Gesundheitsdienst. In: Rodenwaldt E,ed. Hygiene. Part I. General hygiene. Wiesbaden: Dietrich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1948:36.
21Informationsdienst des Hauptamtes fur Volksgesundheitder NSDAP. 1944;April-June:60-1.
22 Muller F H. Tabakmissbrauch und Lungencarcinom. Z Krebsforsch1939;49:57-85.
23 Schairer E, Schoniger E. Lungenkrebs und Tabakverbrauch.Z Krebsforsch1943;54:261-9.
24 Kittel W. Hygiene des Rauchens. In: Handloser S, Hoffmann W, eds. Wehrhygiene. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1944.
25 Goedel A. Kriegspathologische Beitrage. In: Zimmer A, ed.Kriegschirurgie. Vol 1. Vienna: Franz Deuticke, 1944.
26 Pritzkoleit K. Auf einer Woge von Gold: Der Triumph der Wirtschaft.Vienna: Verlag Kurt Desch, 1961.
27 Werberat der deutschen Wirtschaft. Volksgesundheit und Werbung. Berlin: arl Heymanns, 1939.
28 Peto R. Smoking and death. BMJ 1995;310:396.
The fact is, California is worse than Nazi Germany because Hitler STOPPED the ban at prisons. So please, I beg of you, let the public know that while they may love these laws, they came from a fascist. Because to just have the public blindly follow laws without informing them of its' origins, it just makes the rest of us think you are truly pushing an agenda.
Well I Never
posted by Robert Ainsley on 21 May 2007 at 12:41 pmI am so taken aback by the last opinion that I am going to rush out, right now, and smoke one hundred cigarettes per day for the rest of my life as a protest against Adolf Hitler and all Nazis. This has nothing to do with the tobacco lobby - this is logical, level headed, good old American common sense.
I shall stop being a vegetarian as well - because Hitler was. In fact, I shall stop wearing shoes and breathing air through my nose. Now, what else did Hitler do....., that I can stop doing myself....?
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