The Food and Drug Administration is using ads that depict yellow teeth and wrinkled skin to show the nation’s at-risk youth the costs associated with cigarette smoking.
The federal agency said Tuesday it is launching a $115 million multimedia education campaign called “The Real Cost” that’s aimed at stopping teenagers from smoking and encouraging them to quit.
Advertisements will run in more than 200 markets throughout the U.S. for at least one year beginning Feb. 11. The campaign will include ads on TV stations such as MTV and print spots in magazines like Teen Vogue. It also will use social media.
“Our kids are the replacement customers for the addicted adult smokers who die or quit each day,” said Mitch Zeller, the director of the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products. “And that’s why we think it’s so important to reach out to them — not to lecture them, not to throw statistics at them — but to reach them in a way that will get them to rethink their relationship with tobacco use.”
Zeller, who oversaw the anti-tobacco “Truth” campaign while working at the nonprofit American Legacy Foundation in the early 2000s, called the new campaign a “compelling, provocative and somewhat graphic way” of grabbing the attention of more than 10 million young people ages 12 to 17 that are open to, or are already experimenting with, cigarettes.
According to the FDA, nearly 90 percent of adult smokers started using cigarettes by age 18 and more than 700 kids under 18 become daily smokers each day. The agency aims to reduce the number of youth cigarette smokers by at least 300,000 within three years.
“While most teens understand the serious health risks associated with tobacco use, they often don’t believe the long-term consequences will ever apply to them,” said FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg. “We’ll highlight some of the real costs and health consequences associated with tobacco use by focusing on some of the things that really matter to teens — their outward appearance and having control and independence over their lives.”
Two of the TV ads show teens walking into a corner store to buy cigarettes. When the cashier tells them it’s going to cost them more than they have, the teens proceed to tear off a piece of their skin and use pliers to pull out a tooth in order to pay for their cigarettes. Other ads portray cigarettes as a man dressed in a dirty white shirt and khaki pants bullying teens and another shows teeth being destroyed by a ray gun shooting cigarettes.
The FDA is evaluating the impact of the campaign by following 8,000 people between the ages of 11 and 16 for two years to assess changes in tobacco-related knowledge, attitudes and behaviors.
The campaign announced Tuesday is the first in a series of campaigns to educate the public about the dangers of tobacco use.
In 2011, the FDA said it planned to spend about $600 million over five years on the campaigns aimed at reducing death and disease caused by tobacco, which is responsible for about 480,000 deaths a year in the U.S.
Tobacco companies are footing the bill for the campaigns through fees charged by the FDA under a 2009 law that gave the agency authority over the tobacco industry.
Future campaigns will target young adults ages 18-24 and people who influence teens, including parents, family members and peers. Other audiences of special interest include minorities, gays, people with disabilities, the military, pregnant women, people living in rural areas, and low-income people.
(AP)
5 Responses
How does this article relate to our community which is always moving to the right and taking on more chumrahs? And if you hold smoking is muttar, also why print the article and demean smokers? By the way, nice picture. I’m sure it sends a great message to yeshiva bachurim.
1. From a macroeconomic perspective, smoking might not be all that bad since it tends to kill people only when their productive years are coming to a close. In effect, you smoke and work until late middle age, and then instead of living a few decades in retirement you drop dead. The savings to social security and medicare (dying before becoming eligible) are tremendous. The decline of smoking may a factor causing the current crisis in funding for social security.
2. Since many medical professionals, especially non-orthodox Jewish ones, are very prejudiced against us, the frum community needs to develop its own public health programs (which we have been doing, e.g., hatzalah).
Smoking kills thousands of Jews every year in the US alone — more than the number of people killed by every Arab terrorist put together since the founding of the State of Israel!
To #1,
Not sure what you meant by “many medical professionals….are prejudiced against us.” Operating under the assumption that you are a professional ywn commenter and not a medical professional, your comment is very anecdotal and ignorant. Think you have it reversed. Reminds me of the old joke: no frum patient ever died of natural causes; his doctor killed
him.
Sorryn my comments were addressed to #2.