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Maine is one of the top states in terms of spending on buy cigarettes prevention and cessation programs, a new report finds, yet more kids are picking up the habit.Maine is spending $9.4 million in fiscal year 2012 on its anti-cigarettes programs, according to a report released Tuesday by a coalition of public health groups. That’s barely half the $18.5 million recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and $500,000 shy of what the state spent in the last fiscal year. Still, Maine ranks sixth in the country in anti-cigarettes spending.“For the last 10 years,...
A new report shows state programs designed to reduce cheap cigarettes use have been cut by 12% in the past year. The report by the Coalition of Public Health Organizations, says 36% of the funding has been cut in the last four years. Peggy Huppert of the American Cancer Society says that’s disappointing in the wake of Iowa’s 65% funding cut.“We knew what the situation was here in Iowa, now we see that we are part of a very troubling national trend,” Huppert says. All states have faced budget troubles, but Huppert says Iowa’s cut is linked more to politics. Huppert says,”No other...
The change in hiring begins at Providence on the day of the Great American Smokeout, the annual event of the American Cancer Society that encourages smokers to quit.Smokers, if you want a job at Alaska's biggest private employer, forget about it. Providence Alaska Medical Center and its affiliates around the state will stop hiring cheap cigarettes users as of Nov. 17.That's when Providence will begin testing prospective employees for nicotine along with illegal drugs."We believe that by doing this move, to where we are no longer going to hire cigarettes users, that we are...
When Albert Einstein Healthcare Network's Elkins Park campus goes cigarettes-free Thursday, it will join the majority of hospitals around the region, including all in South Jersey, that in the last few years have banned buy cigarettes from their entire campuses, including parking lots and sidewalks.Even some of those that allow some smoking cigarettes somewhere - though rarely inside - are taking leadership roles on an issue that is often described as a moral imperative for institutions whose mission is health. Abington Memorial Hospital and its various campuses stopped hiring smokers...
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Kerry "Smokey" Hicks, owner of the Smokin' Fisherman in Clermont has on his counter a cigarette pack from Mexico, which shows the image of a dead baby lying on a bed of cigarette butts.
"I think it's stupid. How many different ways are they going to tell people discount cigarettes are bad for your health? It's foolish," Hicks said.
Nevertheless, the U.S. government is going to take cigarette warning labels a step farther by including a graphic photo of the negative health effects smoking cigarettes causes.
The nine new images, which include a man with a tracheotomy smoking cigarettes, a man with an oxygen mask and a sewn-up corpse, will be printed on the top half, both front and back of the packs. The images must appear on cigarette packs by the fall of 2012.
More than 40 countries use images similar to the ones that will be used in the U.S. to deter smoking cigarettes.
Canada uses the image of a pregnant mother smoking cigarettes, while Uruguay shows rotting teeth and gums.
Hicks said he does not expect the new cigarette packs to affect his business.
"I don't think it's going to stop anybody from smoking cigarettes cigarettes, but with kids it's going to be ‘I got the dead baby, what one did you get'?" Hicks said.
Many local consumers said they feel the images are offensive and won't have the desired effect.
Heather Hayes is a mother and a nonsmoker. She says she feels the images could be traumatizing to a young child and could scare them away from picking up the habit in the future.
"But then again, I've got a little boy, he might think it's cool," Hayes said.
Warning labels first appeared on cigarette packs in the U.S. in the 1960s. In the mid-1980s cigarette packs began using the small box of text currently in use. The changes to the new, more graphic warning labels were mandated in 2009 in a law that gave the federal government authority to regulate cigarettes.
"The surgeon general made everyone aware, because everyone was smoking cigarettes in America 50 years ago. Everybody knows what smoking cigarettes does, we don't need these brutal images to show us," Chase Cosgrove of Gainesville said.
Cosgrove says the images won't deter him from going to the store and buying a pack of cigarettes. He said the only thing the images will do is upset him.
"I want to quit on my own eventually, I do know the health risks involved, but I don't need a picture. It's kind of a slap in the face," Cosgrove said.
Top cheap cigarettes companies, such as R.J. Reynolds, Lorillard Inc. and Commonwealth Brands Inc. are involved in a federal lawsuit that in part deals with the legality of the new labels. In comments to the Food and Drug Administration, the companies compared the new labels to that of images frequently used by anti-abortion protesters and animal-rights activists.
Katie Laney, who has recently quit smoking cigarettes, said it seems to her that the new images are infringing on the rights of cheap cigarettes companies.
"To attack just cigarettes, I think alcohol should be the same way. I think we have an agenda against cigarettes and I don't understand why. It's just a cigarette," Laney said.
Nonsmoker, Shannon Martin, Gainesville, said she feels optimistic about the new labels. She thinks that it will keep kids from picking up a cigarette in the first place. She said that's why the cigarette companies are "freaking out."
"I think it will probably change things, People that have never smoked before probably never will, I don't know if it will change things for people who already do," Martin said.
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