Nearly 1-in-4 Illinois high schoolers using tobacco, report warns
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[January 29, 2022]
By Scot Bertram
(The Center Square) – A new study argues
Illinois could do more to reduce tobacco use across the state.
The annual American Lung Association “State of Tobacco Control” report
tracks the efforts of the federal government and state governments
across the country on actions taken to eliminate tobacco use and enact
tobacco control laws and policies.
Illinois received mixed grades across five different categories, but
raised its mark from a “D” to a “C” when it comes to access to cessation
services.
“That is in large part because Illinois now has a law in place that
requires Medicaid to cover all three forms of tobacco cessation
counseling, phone, group, and individual,” said Kristina Hamilton,
director of advocacy for the American Lung Association in Illinois and
Iowa. “It's important because smoking rates among low-income people are
nearly double the general population in Illinois,” Hamilton said. “This
will hopefully help to reduce the smoking rate among low income
individuals.”
The report notes that Illinois spends about $12 million on total funding
for state tobacco control programs, nowhere near the $136 million that
some experts argue should be the goal.
“We still are at only 9% of what the CDC recommends we spend on tobacco
prevention and control,” Hamilton said. “We would like the General
Assembly to increase that budget in the future.”
The ALA remains highly concerned about the nearly 23% of Illinois high
school students using some form of tobacco, driven in large part by
e-cigarettes, especially flavored e-cigarettes.
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“We are strongly advocating for municipalities to pass policies to end
the sale of flavored tobacco products that include menthol cigarettes
and flavored cigarettes because they are so popular among youth,”
Hamilton said. “It's really undoing a lot of the impactful work that the
tobacco control community has done the past couple of decades.”
Among the recommendations in the report, the American Lung Association
is calling on Illinois lawmakers to act to ensure tax parity among
tobacco products, including e-cigarettes and cigarettes.
“We would like to see other tobacco products taxed at the same rate of
cigarettes,” Hamilton said. “For price sensitive consumers of tobacco
products, if you increase taxes, you do see lower usage rates of build
tobacco products.”
The ALA also continues to advocate for states to eliminate the sale of
all flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes.
Illinois gets high marks for its air quality, thanks in large part to
the now nearly 15-year-old Smoke-Free Illinois Act which prohibits
smoking in virtually all public places and workspaces.
“We know that it has saved lives and prevented another generation being
addicted to certain tobacco products,” Hamilton said.
New in Illinois is the Preventing Youth Vaping Act, which took effect at
the beginning of the year. The law prohibits companies from marketing
e-cigarettes to minors, prohibits misleading e-cigarette advertising,
and gives the Illinois attorney general’s office and law enforcement
agencies both criminal and civil authority to hold violators
accountable. |