3A NEWS/tEte Ctarlotte $ot Thursday, January 12, 2006 Youth smoking decline slowing Continued from page 1A rettes has been decelerating over the past several years; and in 2005 the decline halted among eighth graders, who have been the bellwethers of smoking among teens.” The percentage of teen smokers reported by MTF in January 2005 was 25 p^x^t of 12th graders, 16 percent of 10th graders and 9 percent of 8th graders. In comparison, the current rates are 23 per cent of 12th graders (two per centage points lower), 15 per cent of 10th graders (one per centage point lower), and 9 percait of 8th graders (the same as last year). The MTF study paid for by grants fix)m the National Institute on Drug Abuse, was conducted by an annual sur vey of representative samples of approximatdy 50,000 stu dents around the nation in grades eight, 10th, 11th and 12th, in 400 secondary schools. The survey asks the students if they have smoked within the past 30 days. Rather tight than quit Over the past decade, the rates had, for the most part, steadily dedined, sometimes leaping as much as four per centage points fium one year to the next. But, the gradual slowing of the decline has given anti-tobacco advcx:ates cause for m^jor concern “In the 30 years that this study now spans, we have seen some wide fluctuations in the smoking habits of American young people,” states Lloyd Johnson, the study’s lead researcher. “We are still sedng some residual dedines in smoking in the upper grades, as the lower- smoking birth cohorts make their way up the age spec trum. ,. But, even in the upper grades a slowdown is cxxnar- ring, and we believe the declines are likely to end very soon” The overall high school smoking rate for black stu dents is 14 percent, compared to 26 percent fco- whites. The CDC reports that the 14 per cent for Afiican-Americans is a m^jor reduction from 22 percent six years ago. That’s one reason the slowing of the traid is so disappointing to health and anti-tobacco advo cates. The study states that the slowing decline is in large part because of the failure of states to use mcmey provided by the 1998 Master Settlement Agreement between attorneys general from 46 states, five U.S. toii- tories and the tobacco indus try that’s supposed to address youth smoking and help smokes who want to quit. “Only a handful of states have used this money for its intended purpose,” says Cherji Healton, president and chief execnitive of the American Legacy Foundation, the nation’s only foundation solely focused on tobacco prevention and cessa tion. Healton also says a clause in the agreement allowed the tobacco industry to stop pay ments into a National Public Education Fund in 2003, effectively cutting funding for Legacy’s “TVuth” campaign, the only national youth tobac co-prevention initiative not directed or controlled by the tobacco industry The 5-year-old Iriith cam paign is the laigest national youth-smoking-prevention campaign and the only national campaign not direct ed by the tobacco industry It exposes inside information about the tobacco industry, facts about addiction, health effects and social conse quences of smoking in order to help te«is make informed choices about tobacco use. “At a time when only four states — Colorado, Delaware, Maine and Mississippi *-have allocated tobacco prevaition and cessation budgets at rec ommended CDC levels, the industry spent $15.4 billion in 2003, according to the U.S. Federal TVade Commission,” Healton says in a statement in response to the MTF study “That means that for every dollar the United States spends on tobacco prevention, the tobacco industry is paying $28 [million a day] to market its deadly products — a fact that paints a bleak picture for the health of our nation.” Legacy, National Afiican- American Tbbacco Prevention Network the National Latino Coimcil on Alcohol and Tobacco Prevention, and other anti-tobacco advocates have engaged in heated bat tles against youth smoking including a campaign against flavored cigarettes, which they see particularly targeted black teens to get them hooked. Eighty percent of smokers start before the age of 18, according to the CDC. Meanwhile, the tobacco industry continues to do dam age, Healton states. “Tbbacco use kills 1200 Americans every day and 450,000 eveiy year. More peo ple die fium tobacco-related diseases than fix)m AIDS, alcohol use, drugs, fires, car accidents, murders and sui cides combined,” says Healton. ‘Tt is the nation’s leading preventable cause of death.” In 2004, the American Legacy Foundation awarded a $4.5 million, three-year grant to a coalition of six national Afiican-American organizations — the National Newspaper Publishers Association Foundation, the NAAC^, the National Urban League, the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, the National Conference of Black Mayors and the National Association of Neighborhoods - to help curb tobacco use among Afiican- Americans. How to butt out In response to the study, Legacy issued a statement making three recommenda tions that the public health community and the commu nity in general can take to continue reducii^ youth smoking: • Encourage the states’ commitment to spending tobaccx) settlement dollars to youth smoking-prevention campaigns and to educate people on how to quit. • Find a way to restore the National Public Education Fund. A shift in tobacco sales market share allowed the tobacco industry to stop pay ments to this fund established in the Master Settlement Agreement. As a result, limit ed funding is now available for the Triith program, credit ed for 22 percent of the overall decline in youth smoking between 2000 and 2002, when the campaign was fully funded. • (Ibntinue to document the impact of smoking in the movies on American youth. 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