| COLUMBIA DAILY
TRIBUNE
Teen
smoking drops by half
Cigarette use falls below national average.
By
DAVID A. LIEB of The Associated Press
Published
Monday, August 28, 2006
JEFFERSON CITY - Despite a relatively paltry state
anti-tobacco budget, the smoking rate among Missouri
teenagers has been cut nearly in half during the past
decade.
About
40 percent of Missouri high school students admitted
recently smoking a cigarette in a survey conducted in
1995. That percentage had fallen to about 30 percent by
2001.
Last
year, barely 21 percent of surveyed high school students
said they had smoked one or more cigarettes in the past
30 days - a rate that for the first time fell below the
national average.
Why
the decline?
Part
of the reduction reflects a national trend.
The
biennial Youth Risk Behavior Survey conducted in
conjunction with the federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention showed the national high school smoking
rate fell by about one-third during that same time.
Yet
Missouri’s reduction surpassed the norm.
One
thing is for sure, Missouri’s falling teen smoking rate
is not a result of a massive government effort.
The
state spends about $2 million each year on anti-tobacco
efforts, including education, cessation and law
enforcement programs run through departments of health,
mental health and public safety.
The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends
Missouri spend at least $33 million annually on a
comprehensive anti-tobacco program - and up to $91
million a year if it really wants to do the job well.
While
applauding the decline, some anti-tobacco opponents are
stunned at Missouri’s success, given its reluctance to
spend the big bucks.
"Just
think if the Missouri Legislature was addressing this
issue, what type of decrease we would see," said Cindy
Erickson, chief executive officer of the American Lung
Association of Missouri. "That’s one we’d get an answer
to when this tax goes on the ballot."
Erickson also is a spokeswoman for the Committee for a
Healthy Future, which is sponsoring a proposed
constitutional amendment that would more than quintuple
Missouri’s cigarette tax - now among the lowest
nationally - and triple taxes on other tobacco products.
Although initially denied from the ballot by the
secretary of state’s office, supporters are confident
they can overturn that decision in court by showing that
hundreds of initiative petition signatures were
incorrectly not counted.
If
placed on the Nov. 7 ballot and approved by voters, the
proposed constitutional amendment would generate at
least $351 million annually, $61 million of which would
go to smoking prevention and cessation programs - a
nearly 3,000 percent increase over the state’s current
funding.
Opponents of the tobacco tax increase claim the windfall
would be a waste, given the success Missouri already has
seen with its modest budget.
"Clearly, throwing money at this problem is not
necessary," said Ron Leone, executive director of the
Missouri Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Store
Association. "What we need to do is to continue to
educate teens about the dangers of tobacco, because
that’s working."
Though budget-constrained, Missouri has taken several
steps to combat teenage tobacco use - all of which could
help explain the decline in youth smoking.
▪
In 1999, the health department awarded a grant to the
Northeast Missouri Cancer Control Coalition to help
start up Smokebusters, a program that not only teaches
students in grades eight to 12 about the dangers of
tobacco but trains them who to lobby for smoke-free
environments in schools, restaurants and elsewhere. That
program has now spread to other parts of the state.
▪
In 2001, the General Assembly passed a bill making it illegal
for people younger than 18 to buy, try to buy or possess
tobacco products, or to lie about their age to try to
buy them.
Since
then, the Division of Alcohol and Tobacco Control has
issued a total of 946 "minor in possession" citations -
a figure that peaked the first full year after the law
took effect and has declined significantly in subsequent
years.
▪
In March 2005, the division began using undercover minors
during enforcement stings on tobacco retailers.
In the
next 17 months, the division conducted 480 "compliance
checks" on tobacco sellers, netting a sizable increase
in the number of clerks cited for selling tobacco to
minors.
▪
The state also has increased its training for spotting fake
identifications for store managers, cashiers and
bartenders - an effort that has affected the enforcement
of both alcohol and tobacco laws.
Apart
from the state programs, Leone said his convenience
store members also have "redoubled their efforts" in
recent years "to ensure minors do not have access to
tobacco products."
The
Youth Risk Behavior Survey shows that, indeed, fewer
minors are buying cigarettes.
In
the 2001 survey, 19 percent of smokers younger than age
18 said they usually got their cigarettes by buying them
at a store or gas station.
That
percentage had fallen to 13 percent in last year's
survey - a significant decrease, the study said.
Pete
Lobdell, supervisor of the Missouri Department of Public
Safety's alcohol and tobacco enforcement, cites several
reasons for the decline in youth smoking.
"I
think there is more awareness on the retailers and, I
think, even the youth - in school and in the media," he
said, "awareness of the law that they can be ticketed,
but also awareness that it's a health problem."
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