Monday, September 13, 2010

Dr. Philip Gardiner Addresses CTFA Conference



Handsel Art

13 September 2010

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

contact J.R. Few

handselart@gmail.com

or 870-427-1365


Authority Discusses Menthol in Tobacco


“Young Blacks have found their thing, it’s menthol in general and KOOL in particular.” Philip Morris Tobacco Company, 1974


Recently Arkansans were fortunate to have Dr. Philip Gardiner speak at the Coalition for a Tobacco Free Arkansas’ annual Striking Out Tobacco in Arkansas conference. Dr. Gardiner is a public health activist concerned with issues ranging from racial disparities in health care, AIDS and cancer, to the effect of menthol in tobacco and the African American community. The National African American Tobacco Prevention Network estimates that 82% of African Americans smoke menthols. The tobacco industry has a history of advertising, discounting, and promoting menthol cigarettes most heavily in African American communities.


In 2009 Congress passed the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act giving limited authority to the FDA over tobacco. The Act prohibited tobacco companies from using fruit and candy flavors in tobacco in an effort to curb youth smoking but failed to eliminate the most common flavoring, menthol.


Gardiner’s presentation noted the CDC estimates smoking rates in the African American community at 22.4%. A more detailed study shows smoking rates closer to 38%. African Americans start smoking later in life, generally smoke fewer cigarettes, smoke cigarettes with a higher nicotine content compared to other ethnic groups, and are more likely to smoke menthol cigarettes. They also suffer disproportionately from tobacco related disease and death.


The FDA Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Panel is currently studying the effect of menthol in tobacco. Menthol is used in many different products and is generally considered harmless. Dr. Gardiner’s emphasis was to broaden the concept of harm in cigarettes because it makes smoking more palatable, harder to quit, and “makes the poison go down easier.” It is the “ultimate candy flavoring”, he said.