Taking certain actions seem to be such an obviously good
idea that one is occasionally startled to realize that they haven’t
happened. Bloomberg Businessweek created such a moment when a brief editorial
comment was encountered in a recent issue: Raise the Smoking Age to 21.
The Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention have been tracking smoking as a deadly
disease for a long time, and the path to addiction is clear. This document
provides this insight.
“Nearly 9 out of 10 cigarette
smokers first tried smoking by age 18, and 99% first tried smoking by age 26.”
And it provides this perspective
on the lives of smokers.
“CDC analyzed 2010 National
Health Interview Survey (NHIS) data to describe U.S. adult smokers' interest in
quitting, quit attempts in the past year, successful recent smoking cessation,
and use of evidence-based cessation treatments and services by demographic
characteristics. This report describes the results of that analysis, which
found that 68.8% of current smokers want to completely stop smoking, 52.4% of
smokers had made a quit attempt in the past year, and 6.2% of smokers had
successfully quit within the past year.”
So, developing a smoking addiction is a young person’s
problem, but once hooked, most spend the rest of their lives trying to escape
from the filthy habit.
It seems obvious that every step should be taken to
eliminate access to tobacco products by young people. This need not be totally effective in order
to produce a reduction in addiction.
Developing a need for a drug like nicotine is a complex process. One does not smoke one cigarette and become
addicted. It requires frequent use of
the drug plus social support for the habit (peer pressure) in order to take
hold.
Any action that makes frequent smoking difficult is
likely to be beneficial. The Bloomberg Businessweek article provides
this background information.
“Hawaii became the first state
to make this change after observing the success of the first such
local law, in Needham, Massachusetts. Since Needham's ordinance was
adopted in 2005, youth smoking there has fallen by more than half. In 2013, New
York became the first big city to follow suit (under then-mayor Michael
Bloomberg, the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP). Today, nearly 100
localities in eight states have done so, and more are considering it. States
have been slower to act; the California Senate passed such a bill this summer,
and the Massachusetts legislature is also weighing the change.”
It also provides an argument to be used on critics of the
21 year age limit.
“Critics make a familiar
counterargument: If 18-year-olds can vote and serve in the military, why can't
they light up? It's a fair point. This age group also can't drink alcohol,
however, and the case for limiting access to tobacco is even stronger, because
there's no safe level of tobacco use.”
The article provides a compelling reason for raising the
age limit. Who knows more about getting
young people addicted to tobacco products than the tobacco companies?
“….a Philip Morris memo from the
1980s warned, ‘Raising the legal minimum age for cigarette purchaser to 21
could gut our key young adult market (17-20)’."
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