Guest MINDSETTER™ Jennifer Wall: Are We Doing Enough to Protect Youth From Tobacco Addiction?

Guest MINDSETTER™ Jennifer Wall

Guest MINDSETTER™ Jennifer Wall: Are We Doing Enough to Protect Youth From Tobacco Addiction?

Although we can be proud that Rhode Island has the second lowest youth cigarette smoking rate in the nation at 8%, that is still 4,700 children who are smoking cigarettes and risking serious harm to their health. Furthermore, surveys show that 28% of RI’s youth smokers report they are able to purchase their own cigarettes in retail outlets.

Despite our low youth cigarette smoking rate, according to the RI Department of Health a much higher 15% of RI youth report using non-cigarette tobacco products, such as little cigars and hookah.

It’s clear that tobacco use can cause cancer, heart disease, lung diseases, harm to reproductive health and more.  But did you know that 16,000 kids under 18 that are alive in Rhode Island today will ultimately die prematurely from their own smoking?

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST

Tobacco companies know they need to hook kids on their products in order to create lifelong addicted consumers. Almost 90% of adult smokers started before they were 18. Big Tobacco spends more than $1 million every hour marketing their deadly and addictive products, much of it targeted to youth, saturating convenience stores, gas stations and other retail outlets with colorful, attractive ads and strategic placement of tobacco products.  

Big Tobacco spends an estimated $25.2 million on tobacco advertising in Rhode Island every year. And what does the Rhode Island State Legislature give the RI Department of Health’s Tobacco Control Program to counter this marketing, educate the public and help smokers quit? Less than a half-million dollars a year. The CDC recommends a state investment of $12 million, which explains why RI consistently gets an “F” grade for tobacco prevention spending on the American Lung Association’s annual State of Tobacco Control Report Card.

Despite shoestring budgets for tobacco control, the RI Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals; RI Department of Health; local police departments and local substance abuse prevention coalitions collaborate to conduct annual, unannounced inspections of retail tobacco outlets to test whether stores will sell tobacco products to undercover minors.  As GoLocal reported, since 2014, the state’s tobacco enforcement program has cited over 200 RI retailers for selling tobacco to minors. But state and local officials tell us that due to the lack of funding, not all communities are getting these crucial annual compliance checks.

Rhode Island passed a law in 2014 restricting youth access to electronic cigarettes, to further keep highly addictive nicotine products out of the hands of youth. The General Assembly is to be commended for passing laws to protect our youth from addiction; however, legislators did not allocate any funding to add e-cigarettes to the annual retailer compliance check inspections, or to make sure retailers have obtained their e-cigarette sales licenses. It is imperative that we have laws to protect kids from addiction, but laws without enforcement budgets are not effective.

It is time for the Obama Administration to give the FDA the authority it needs to regulate ALL tobacco products, including e-cigarettes, at the federal level.  It is also time for the state of Rhode Island to adequately fund the RI Tobacco Control Program, state tobacco enforcement and tobacco prevention and cessation programs. Spending just two cents on every dollar of  the millions we receive in annual tobacco tax revenue is grossly inadequate. It is time for all tobacco retailers to stand up and obey the law by not selling tobacco to our kids. The time to protect our youth from deadly tobacco addiction is now.

 

Tobacco Free RI is a statewide network of organizations and individuals working to reduce tobacco use – the leading cause of preventable death and disease in Rhode Island.
www.TobaccoFree-RI.org


50 RI School Cafeterias with the Most Health Code Violations

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.