Download - Tobacco Control: How is Michigan Doing?
Tobacco Control: How is Michigan Doing?
Ron Davis, M.D.Center for Health Promotion & Disease Prevention
Henry Ford Health System
Tobacco-Free Michigan Membership Meeting
July 25, 2003 / East Lansing, Michigan
Henry Ford, 1916How Employers Feel Toward Cigarette Smokers
Here is an Automobile Company’s Attitude
“Cigarette smoking is acquiring a hold on a great many boys in our community…. Since it is such a bad practice and is taking such a hold upon so many people, we think it is a disgrace for a grown man to smoke cigarettes, because it is not only injurious to his health, but it is such a bad example to the boys….”
Source: Henry Ford, The Case Against the Little White Slaver, 1916. (reprinted by the Historical Society of Michigan, 1992)
Henry Ford, 1916 (continued)
“Boys who smoke cigarettes we do not care to keep in our employ. In the future we will not hire anyone whom we know to be addicted to this habit. It is our desire to weed it entirely out of the factory just as soon as practicable….
“We have two objects in interesting ourselves in this matter: First, to help men and boys; second, we believe that men who do not smoke cigarettes or frequent the saloon can make better automobiles than those who do.”
Michigan All States
Adult smoking (2000) 24.2% 23.3%
Michigan versus U.S.
Michigan All States
Adult smoking (2000) 24.2% 23.3%
Youth smoking (grades 6-8)* 9.3% 11.0%
* National YTS (2000); Michigan YTS (2001)
Michigan versus U.S.
Michigan All States
Adult smoking (2000) 24.2% 23.3%
Youth smoking (grades 6-8)* 9.3% 11.0%
Youth smoking (grades 9-12)* 27.6% 28.0%
* National YTS (2000); Michigan YTS (2001)
Michigan versus U.S.
Michigan All States
Adult smoking (2000) 24.2% 23.3%
Youth smoking (grades 6-8)* 9.3% 11.0%
Youth smoking (grades 9-12)* 27.6% 28.0%
Smoking-attributable death rate, 1999 (per 100,000)
299.0 295.5
* National YTS (2000); Michigan YTS (2001)
Michigan versus U.S.
Guide to Community Preventive Services: Tobacco Use Prevention and Control
Strategies to Reduce Tobacco Use Initiation
• Increase the unit price for tobacco products: strongly recommended
• Mass media campaigns: strongly recommended (when combined with other interventions)
Source: Amer J Prev Med 2001; 20 (2S): 1-88
Guide to Community Preventive Services: Tobacco Use Prevention and Control
Strategies to Increase Tobacco Use Cessation
• Increase the unit price for tobacco products: strongly recommended
• Mass media campaigns: strongly recommended (when combined with other interventions)
Source: Amer J Prev Med 2001; 20 (2S): 1-88
Guide to Community Preventive Services: Tobacco Use Prevention and Control
Strategies to Increase Tobacco Use Cessation
• Multicomponent patient telephone support: strongly recommended
• Provider reminder system and a provider education program, with or without patient education: strongly recommended
Source: Amer J Prev Med 2001; 20 (2S): 1-88
Guide to Community Preventive Services: Tobacco Use Prevention and Control
Strategies to Reduce Exposure to ETS
• Smoking bans and restrictions: strongly recommended
• Community education: insufficient evidence
Source: Amer J Prev Med 2001; 20 (2S): 1-88
Michigan’s Investment in Tobacco Control
• CDC’s Best Practices recommends:$55-155 million / year
• In FY 2002, Michigan spent:– $3.9 million from state sources– $2.4 million from federal/national sources– $6.3 million total (63¢ per capita)
State Cigarette Excise Taxes, 2002
• $1.51 Massachusetts• $1.51 Connecticut• $1.50 New York• $1.50 New Jersey• $1.50 Rhode Island
• $1.425 Washington• $1.30 Hawaii• $1.28 Oregon• $1.25 Michigan
State average = 70.5¢
http://tobaccofreekids.org/research/factsheets/pdf/0099.pdf
Very little earmarked to health in MI
Cigarette Taxes and Prices in Selected Developed Countries, 2002
Percentages represent proportion of retail price devoted to taxes
States with Comprehensive Smoke-free Workplace Laws
• California – 1994, 1998 (bars)
• Delaware – 2002
• Florida– 2002 ballot initiative (71% support)– 2003 law
• Connecticut – 2003
• New York – 2003
Municipalities with 100% Smoke-Free Ordinances
Source: American Nonsmokers’ Rights Foundation
Michigan Clean Indoor Air Policies
• Weak Michigan Clean Indoor Air Act– Does not apply to most private worksites– Allows designated smoking areas in public
places (no requirement to be physically separated and separately ventilated)
• Weak state restaurant smoking law> 50% nonsmoking seating (> 50 seats)
> 25% nonsmoking seating (< 50 seats)
(no special requirements for ventilation)
Michigan Clean Indoor Air Policies(continued)
• State preemption of local restaurant smoking ordinances
• State school smoking ban applies only to public schools, and allows smoking on school grounds after school hours
• Few local jurisdictions have adopted comprehensive smoke-free ordinances (Ingham and Washtenaw Counties, City of Marquette)
Secondhand Smoke
Australia: Aorta
Australia: Stroke
Australia: Eye
Michigan’s Scorecard
• Adult smoking: C-• Youth smoking: C+• Smoking deaths: C-• Investment in tobacco
control: D• Tobacco taxes: B-• Clean indoor air: D-
• Mass media: D-• Cessation support
(healthcare/quitline): C• Organizational
commitments: B+• Human capital: A
Overall Score =
Omar PaulkGrade 8:
“In the neighborhood, the phrase ‘to smoke’ means to kill someone. ‘He got smoked’ means he got killed. When smokers finish a cigarette, they say they are killing the cigarette. My drawing asks the question, Who’s Smoking Who? It means the cigarette is killing the smoker.”
James Robinson
Grade 11
Cass Technical High School
Damardre Williams
Grade 11
Detroit High School for the Arts
Edwin AndrewsGrade 12Renaissance High School