Published: September 07, 2008
Big Tobacco's Grip on Colleges and Students Loosens, But Still Holding Strong: New Report Examines Trends on Campuses
WASHINGTON, Sept. 8 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- College students are
falling victim to aggressive tobacco industry marketing tactics as one in five
continue to smoke, according to a new report released today by the American
Lung Association.
The report provides a comprehensive overview of the current status of
tobacco use and policies on college and university campuses. The American Lung
Association analyzed published research, surveys and tobacco industry
documents to provide a wide-ranging look at the impact tobacco has in today's
college life.
The report found fewer college students are smoking than ever before, but
the American Lung Association warned that smoking rates were nearly this low
in 1989 and then skyrocketed in the following decade to a new peak high of
30.6 percent. Contributing to that unstable smoking trend is the tobacco
industry. In 2005, the tobacco industry spent more than $1 million a day
sponsoring events and giveaways targeting college students. The report also
notes that of 119 schools surveyed in one study, students at 109 schools
reported seeing tobacco promotions in an event on campus.
"The industry's return on investment is staggering," said Bernadette A.
Toomey, American Lung Association President and CEO. "Nearly 20 percent of
today's college students are regular smokers. Even worse is their continued
campaign to increase these numbers. Every college student in America has a
target on their back as far as the tobacco industry is concerned."
The report also notes that the smoking habits of college-age adults are
more fluid -- switching more easily between daily and occasional smoking --
than that of older adults. This characteristic indicates a key opportunity to
intervene and reduce smoking rates among young adults.
Review of the tobacco industry's own archives revealed programmatic
campaigns to target young adults during transitional life stages. Moving from
high school to college or work has been identified by the industry as a prime
time for developing and cementing new behaviors like smoking. Tobacco
companies exploit this vulnerability by sponsoring promotions in bars and
nightclubs to encourage smoking as a social norm in efforts to move students
from "experimental" to pack-a-day smokers. The report indicates many students
view smoking as a social norm among their peers. In the fall of 2006, the
American College Health Association reported that 86 percent of college
students perceived that their peers smoked at least one cigarette a month.
Conversely, data from that same survey indicated that just 22 percent of
college students smoked cigarettes at some point in the preceding 30 days.
The American Lung Association urges university leaders to stand up against
Big Tobacco and implement measures to protect their students from the
industry's predatory practices.
"Colleges and universities have a responsibility to provide safe spaces in
which their students can learn and live," said Toomey. "This should include an
environment free from secondhand smoke and advertising that encourages young
adults to use deadly tobacco products."
The American Lung Association calls upon the higher education community to
join the Smokefree Air 2010 Challenge, a nationwide movement to eliminate
exposure to secondhand smoke in public places and workplaces no later than
2010 and reduce smoking-related illnesses, by implementing the following
policies and initiatives in this school year:
-- Prohibit tobacco use at all indoor and outdoor facilities, private
offices, residence halls and dormitories.
-- Stop the sale and advertising of tobacco products on campus and in
college controlled publications, properties and events.
-- Refuse all research and sponsorship funding from the tobacco industry.
-- Provide smoking cessation programs to all students, faculty and staff.
-- Implement and enforce strong policies to aid in the prevention,
cessation and elimination of tobacco use across campus.
-- Educate students and faculty about the harmful effects of using tobacco
products, the resources available for cessation and campus policies.
-- Promote and fund research to design and implement smoking and tobacco
use interventions that specifically target college students.
-- Lobby state legislatures to create laws to prohibit tobacco use on
campus.
For a copy of American Lung Association's report on smoking trends on
college campuses titled: Big Tobacco on Campus: Ending the Addiction, visit:
http://www.lungusa.org. Additional resources for students can be found on our
Facebook community at: http://apps.facebook.com/healthylungs/. This report is
supported by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation inPrinceton, New
Jersey.
For more information on the American Lung Association's Smokefree Air 2010
Challenge, go to http://www.lungusa.org/smokefree2010.
About the American Lung Association: Beginning our second century, the
American Lung Association is the leading organization working to prevent lung
disease and promote lung health. Lung disease death rates are currently
increasing while other major causes of death are declining. The American Lung
Association funds vital research on the causes of and treatments for lung
disease. With the generous support of the public, the American Lung
Association is "Improving life, one breath at a time." For more information
about the American Lung Association, a Charity Navigator Four Star Charity, or
to support the work it does, call 1-800-LUNG-USA (1-800-586-4872) or log on to
http://www.lungusa.org.
SOURCE American Lung Association
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