Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Important study finds that using e-cigarettes reduces successful quits

       Reposted at http://tobaccodeathray.blogspot.com,

A paper published earlier this year <http://ntr.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2013/05/07/ntr.ntt061.abstract> adds to the growing evidence that claims that e-cigarettes help people quit smoking are false.
 
Study authors collected information on e-cigarette use from people who called state quitlines in Connecticut, Louisiana, Nebraska, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Texas.  Nearly one third (30.9%) of respondents reported ever using or trying e-cigarettes; most used for a short period of time (61.7% for less than 1 month). Consistent with what other surveys have found, the most frequently reported reasons for use were to help quit other tobacco (51.3%) or to replace other tobacco products (15.2%). Study findings suggest that both e-cigarette user groups were significantly less likely to have quit smoking 7 months after first calling the quitline compared with participants who had never tried e-cigarettes: Only 21.7% of people who used e-cigarettes to help quit and 16.6% of those who used e-cigarettes to replace other tobacco products had quit, compared to 31.3% of people who did not use e-cigarettes (p < .001).

web-based distance learning for people with serious mental illnesses

 

New York's Office of Mental Health, in a collaboration with the Center for Practice Innovations at Columbia Psychiatry, Research Foundation for Mental Hygiene, New York City Department of Health and Mental Health, and Allen Communication Learning Services, developed a web-based distance learning training in tobacco dependence treatment specifically designed for people with serious mental illnesses. Below are the links you need!

Press Release: Focus on Integrated Treatment Introduces Tobacco Dependence Training Modules
o   To access the training modules, you will need to sign up via the link: http://practiceinnovations.org/CPIInitiatives/FocusonIntegratedTreatmentFIT/tabid/186/Default.aspx
 and then create a username and password.
o   Their recipient / consumer module for tobacco dependence treatment and SMI: 
http://practiceinnovations.org/ConsumersandFamilies/tabid/200/Default.aspx
They ask their providers to watch this with their clients who smoke.
 
Posted by IGLC grantees forum Reposted at  

Thursday, September 5, 2013

CDC stacks Badge

 
Copy the code below to place a badge on your web page with an embedded link to the CDC Stacks home page.


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8 and Counting: SAMHSA State Academies for Smoking Cessation Foster Change


 
The Smoking Cessation Leadership Center (SCLC) is pleased to invite you to a free webinar, 8 and Counting: SAMHSA State Academies for Smoking Cessation Foster Change,” on September 24, 2013 at 2:00pm Eastern Time (90 minutes).  
We are honored to have an assembly of state front-runners in behavioral health, public health, state quitlines, and tobacco control and prevention, presenting on these important topics. Steven A. Schroeder, MD, SCLC Director, will make a special introduction and the moderator, will be Catherine Saucedo, SCLC Deputy Director.  

Webinar objectives

·         Learn about the Leadership Academy State successes and challenges in reducing the prevalence of tobacco use within the behavioral health field

·         Examine recent state tobacco treatment and prevention policies and the strategies used for implementation 

·         Identify two tobacco dependence treatment training programs for behavioral health providers available for use

·         Examine the evaluation of two statewide behavioral health tobacco use reduction projects and understand the important role data plays in creating change

·         Understand the importance of peer participation in tobacco dependence treatment


Accreditation: The University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) School of Medicine is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians and allied health professionals.

UCSF designates this live activity for a maximum of 1.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM. Participants who join the LIVE session, on September 24, 2013, are eligible to earn up to 1.5 CME/CEU credits for a fee of $25* per certificate.  Physicians and allied health professionals should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the webinar activity.  Nurses, pharmacists, social workers, and other allied health professionals may also claim CE credits. 

*Through September 30, 2013, you are eligible to receive FREE CME/CEU credit thanks to the support of SAMHSA.  First come, first serve. 
Don’t need to claim CME/CEUs?  SCLC issues free certificates of attendance for those who want contact hours only. 
Please feel free to forward this announcement to your colleagues.  For questions, contact Jennifer Matekuare, SCLC Operations Manager, at jmatekuare@medicine.ucsf.edu, or call toll-free (877) 509-3786.  This webinar will be recorded and may be viewed online on the Smoking Cessation Leadership Center’s website after the presentation. 

This Week in CTP - Updates from the Center for Tobacco Products


 
New Tobacco Product Review Decisions and a Final Guidance Announced
08/28/2013
Today, FDA issued additional tobacco product review decisions, denying the marketing and sale of four new tobacco products through the substantial equivalence review path. The products were found to be “not substantially equivalent” to the predicate products to which they were compared. The products under review were not on the market and cannot be introduced into the market. These decisions follow the first tobacco product review decisions, which authorized the marketing and sale of two new tobacco products and denied the marketing and sale of four others on June 25, 2013.
For more information on our substantial equivalence actions, please visit our Tobacco Product Marketing Orders webpage.
---
Last week, FDA published a notice in the Federal Register announcing the release of the final guidance document titled, “Compliance with Regulations Restricting the Sale and Distribution of Cigarettes and Smokeless Tobacco to Protect Children and Adolescents” (also known as the reissued 1996 rule). The final guidance explains the provisions of the final rule, for instance, retailers are prohibited from selling tobacco products to youth under the age of 18; are required to verify the age of all customers under the age of 27 by checking a photo ID; and are prohibited from distributing free samples of cigarettes.
Click here to view the full notice, read the guidance document, and post your comments.

E-cigarette use more than doubles among U.S. middle and high school students from 2011-2012


Released by CDC at Reposted at http://www.tobaccodeathray.blogspot.com,

The percentage of U.S. middle and high school students who use electronic cigarettes, or e-cigarettes, more than doubled from 2011 to 2012, according to data published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The findings from the National Youth Tobacco Survey, in today’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, show that the percentage of high school students who reported ever using an e-cigarette rose from 4.7 percent in 2011 to 10.0 percent in 2012. In the same time period, high school students using e-cigarettes within the past 30 days rose from 1.5 percent to 2.8 percent. Use also doubled among middle school students. Altogether, in 2012 more than 1.78 million middle and high school students nationwide had tried e-cigarettes.

"The increased use of e-cigarettes by teens is deeply troubling," said CDC Director Tom Frieden, M.D., M.P.H. "Nicotine is a highly addictive drug. Many teens who start with e-cigarettes may be condemned to struggling with a lifelong addiction to nicotine and conventional cigarettes."

The study also found that 76.3 percent of middle and high school students who used e-cigarettes within the past 30 days also smoked conventional cigarettes in the same period. In addition, 1 in 5 middle school students who reported ever using e-cigarettes say they have never tried conventional cigarettes. This raises concern that there may be young people for whom e-cigarettes could be an entry point to use of conventional tobacco products, including cigarettes.

"About 90 percent of all smokers begin smoking as teenagers," said Tim McAfee, M.D., M.P.H., director of the CDC Office on Smoking and Health. "We must keep our youth from experimenting or using any tobacco

The Legacy Youth Activism Fellowship


 
The Legacy Youth Activism Fellowship is a national 18-month leadership development program between January 2014 and June 2015 for young adults between the ages of 18 and 24. Throughout the program, fellows learn from nationally recognized leaders, network with other young adult activists from around the nation, receive technical support for local tobacco control projects, and hone their leadership skills.
  
Do you want to take your leadership to the next level? Are you between the ages of 18 and 24? If you consider yourself a change agent with a strong commitment to activism, apply today! If you know someone who fits this criteria, please forward this e-mail.
 
For more information, program criteria, and to submit an application, visit www.legacyforhealth.org/ya. Applications are due October 9, 2013, 5:00 PM EST.
  
Questions about the program or application process can be directed to Legacy's Youth Activism Program via email yap@legacyforhealth.org or phone 202-454-5586.
 

 

Friday, August 30, 2013

DIMENSIONS: Tobacco Free and Well Body Toolkits for Healthcare Providers

Reposted at http://www.tobaccodeathray.blogspot.com
 
The Behavioral Health and Wellness Program at the University of Colorado School of Medicine is proud to announce the completion of the DIMENSIONS: Tobacco Free and Well Body Toolkits for Healthcare Providers. Through partnership with the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, the toolkits are designed for direct healthcare providers as well as administrators and healthcare organizations. The toolkits can be accessed at the links below:

The DIMENSIONS: Tobacco Free Toolkit for Healthcare Providers is designed for a broad range of healthcare providers, including direct providers, administrators, and healthcare organizations. The toolkit provides a variety of information on education about tobacco use, skills for engaging in tobacco cessation discussions, efficient methods for assessing an individual’s readiness to quit, and information and research on treatments.

Quittin Time: Tobacco News Round Up

Posted by ActionToQuit. Reposted at http://www.tobaccodeathray.blogspot.com,

Curbing Childhood Tobacco Use

NEWS

FDA Discusses Banning Online Sales of E-Cigarettes
August 30, 2013   The Food and Drug Administration has been in discussions with the e-cigarette industry about a possible online-sales ban of the product,  as it prepares a package of proposed regulations for the increasingly popular devices, people familiar with the matter said. Read more.

 
How Hospitals Can Help Patients Quit Smoking Before Surgery
August 30, 2013   As GW rolls out its smoke-free campus policy this fall, it follows suit of colleges nationwide that are mostly ignoring the question of how to enforce their smoking bans. Read more.

E-Cigarettes Contain Chemicals That Make Some ‘As Harmful As Normal Tobacco’
August 29, 2013   Electronic cigarettes contain carcinogenic chemicals that make some as harmful as normal tobacco, a new French study has claimed. Read more.

Nicotine Exposure Gives Baby Rats Addictive Personalities
August 29, 2013   Exposure to nicotine in the womb increases the production of brain cells that stimulate appetite, leading to overconsumption of nicotine,  alcohol and fatty foods in later life, according to a new study in rats. Read more.
 
Female Smokers at Higher Risk for Hemorrhagic Stroke
August 28, 2013   The advice that “smoking is bad for you” may be old news, but the American Heart Association has released a new study in their journal Stroke, which reveals women are more susceptible to certain stroke-related risks that result from smoking. Read more.

Doctors Support Raising the Smoking Age
August 28, 2013   Teenagers looking to buy cigarettes in New York may have to look elsewhere if a city council proposal is approved and signed by Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Read more.
 
Why Is Obama Caving on Tobacco?
August 27, 2013   Last year I endorsed President Obama for re-election largely because of his commitment to putting science and public health before politics. Read more.
 
Study Cites Progress in Curbing Tobacco Sales to Minors
August 27, 2013   Federal and state efforts to snuff out tobacco sales to minors are working despite a slight rise in those sales between 2011 and 2012, a new report says. Read more.
 
Doctors Asked to Counsel Teens About the Dangers of Smoking
August 26, 2013   Doctors already have a hefty checklist of topics to go over with their patients. Read more.

Smoking Rates Are on the Decline, but Not So Big Tobacco
August 26, 2013   For years now, the tobacco industry has battled a declining U.S. smoker base and a barrage of anti-smoking campaigns. Read more.
 

ActionToQuit Update


Demystifying Lung Cancer Screening - The Path from U.S. Preventive Service Task Force Recommendation to Implementation is a Warner Series Lecture sponsored by Legacy and the Lung Cancer Alliance. The event will take place Tuesday September 10, 2013 from noon to 2:00 PM Eastern time. For those viewing by webcast, the program begins at 12:30pm. Click HERE to register.

The University of California at San Francisco will go completely tobacco free as of September 3, 2013. HERE is an insightful video commentary. As Stan Glantz says, “UCSF is a 21st century institution and tobacco use is a 20th century artifact that we’re leaving behind”.
The FDA Center for Tobacco Products has developed new guidance for the tobacco industry:  Compliance with Regulations Restricting the Sale and Distribution of Cigarettes and Smokeless Tobacco To Protect Children and Adolescents. This guidance is intended to assist manufacturers, distributors, retailers, and others who sell cigarettes and/or smokeless tobacco in understanding the final regulations and explain what they should do in order to comply. Click HERE.   
From the Journal of Smoking Cessation, Cambridge Journals -Smokers Who Seek Help in Specialized Cessation Clinics: How Special are they Compared to Smokers in General Population? Click HERE.
The marketing department says, If you love cigars or are a former cigarette smoker, this might be an ok alternative to puffing on cancer sticks”. Tobacco-Flavored Vodka. Coming to a Happy Hour near you.

Printed by ActionToQuit. Reposted at http://www.tobaccodeathray.blogspot.com,

Tobacco Free Press Update


The Tobacco Control Network (TCN) is pleased to present the August 2013 edition of the Tobacco Free Press. Here, we bring to you summaries of trending stories from the past month. We hope this monthly e-news digest helps you access and use valuable tobacco-related news, research, training opportunities, and tools efficiently.

The TCN’s mission is to improve the public’s health by providing education and state-based expertise to tobacco prevention and control at the state and national levels. Click here to learn more about the TCN and the resources available to CDC-funded state/territory tobacco control programs and their partners via the network.

 

Tobacco Free Press e-newsletter - August 2013

Follow the links below to access the full articles.

Secondhand Smoke
  • The economic impact of smoke-free laws on restaurants and bars in nine states
  • Environmental tobacco smoke exposure in children aged 3-19 years with and without asthma in the United States, 1999-2010
  • Thirdhand smoke: A select bibliography of recent studies
  • Thirdhand tobacco smoke: A tobacco-specific lung carcinogen on surfaces in smokers' homes
  • No-smoking law in Colorado casinos led to fewer ambulance calls (CO)
  • Policies to Restrict Secondhand Smoke Exposure: American College of Preventive Medicine position statement
  • Anti-smoking battle moves outdoors; bans increase
  • New smoke-free housing resources for California communities with rent control laws (CA)
  • Michigan businesses forced to go smoke-free seeing positive results (MI)
  • Cigarette taxes linked to binge drinking
  • Mass. tax increasing for gas, cigarettes; national average of state tobacco taxes increases to $1.53 per pack (MA)
  • N.H. cigarette tax going up dime (NH)
  • Poll: Strong support for early childhood education funded by cigarette tax
  • Australian smoking rate to beat U.S.'s on tax (Australia)
  • Learn how to keep pharmacies tobacco free and model ordinance: Tobacco retailer licensing
  • Interactive tobacco map provides latest data on state smoking laws
  • Massachusetts bill would ban e-cigarette sales to minors (MA)
  • NC law takes effect banning e-cigarettes to minors (NC)
  • Mayor Emanuel asks Board of Health to take action aimed at curtailing menthol cigarette use among Chicago youth
  • Report shows majority of states falling short on policies to fight and prevent cancer
  • Panel backs lung cancer screening for smokers
  • Introduction effects of the Australian plain packaging policy on adult smokers: a cross-sectional study (Australia)
  • USTR abandons plan to protect tobacco control measures under Trans-Pacific Partnership Trade Agreement
  • New U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendation: Interventions can prevent smoking by children and teens
  • Use of conventional and novel smokeless tobacco products among U.S. adolescents
  • Kids more likely to smoke if older sibling smokes, or if parent smoked as a teen
  • In all flavors, cigars draw in young smokers
  • New study details pervasiveness of little cigars and cigarillos in African American neighborhoods
  • Childhood economic strains in predicting substance use in emerging adulthood: Mediation effects of youth self-control and parenting practices
  • SOPHE journal supplement highlights tobacco disparities among Asian American and related communities
  • Celebrating smokefree casinos video: Jay's Story
  • Mid-state jail turns to electronic cigarettes to raise money (AL, KY, TN)
  • Do people serve as cues to smoke?
  • Quality improvement initiative issue paper: Quitline referral systems
  • Most U.S. smokers want to quit, have tried multiple times
  • Dimensions: Tobacco free toolkit for healthcare providers
  • Analysis of legal and scientific issues in court challenges to graphic tobacco warnings
  • Coral Springs family awarded $37.5 million in suit against tobacco company (FL)
  • FDA issues new warning letters
  • FDA releases report from independent evaluation of menthol as a cigarette flavor, invites public comments
  • Scientific workshop and request for comments: Tobacco product analysis
  • FDA discusses banning online sales of e-cigarettes
  • Tobacco cessation and control a decade later: American Society of Clinical Oncology policy statement update
  • Effects of the economic crisis on smoking prevalence and number of smokers in the USA
  • Webinar: Demystifying Lung Cancer Screening
  • International Conference on Public Health Priorities in the 21st Century: The Endgame for Tobacco
  • Tackling Tobacco in Behavioral Health Settings Training
  • Webinar: New Developments in the Tobacco Use Supplement to the Current Population Survey (TUS-CPS)
  • Webinar: E-cigarettes: The vapor this time?
  • Point of Sale Training Institute
  • 2013 AAP National Conference and Exhibition
  • American Public Health Association Annual Meeting & Exposition
  • Beyond the 5 A's: Improving Cessation Interventions Through Strengthened Training
  • Reduce Tobacco Use Conference 2014
  • Promising Practices to Promote Tobacco-Free Active Living and Healthy Eating in Low Socioeconomic Status Communities
  • Tobacco Epidemiologist
  • Associate Vice President, Research and Evaluation
  • Youth Action Assistant
  • Public Health Policy Campaign Manager
  • Youth Activism Coordinator
  • Staff Services Manager I / Public Relations Strategist
  • Tobacco Office Chief
  • Director of the National Coordinating Center
  • Brand Manager (Teen Hip Hop Campaign)
  • Health Program Manager I
  • Director/Senior Research Specialist, Economic and Health Policy Research
  • Regional Campaign Manager - Southern US - Tobacco Focus
  • Senior Adolescent Health Scientist
  • Research Group Manager
  • Associate Director, Federal Government Relations
  • Country Director — Indonesia
  • Policy Director
  • Country Director
  • Jobs at the Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), Various
  • Food and Drug Administration Request for Proposals: Tobacco retail inspections
  • National Institutes of Health Funding Opportunity Announcements: Behavioral and social science research on understanding and reducing health disparities
  • Nominate a deserving colleague for Community Leadership Award
  • 2013 nominations open - Unsung heroes of public health awards
  • Deadline extended: Looking for real people to appear in ad campaign about the health effects of smoking cigarettes

Need more news?


About This Newsletter

The Tobacco Free Press is funded by the CDC's National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Office on Smoking and Health and managed by the Tobacco Technical Assistance Consortium (TTAC). TTAC is dedicated to assisting organizations in building and growing highly effective tobacco control programs and partners with national, state or local community based organizations to provide technical assistance, products and tools, and tobacco capacity development programs. While TTAC makes every effort to present accurate and reliable information in this newsletter, it does not endorse, approve, or certify such information, nor does it guarantee its accuracy, completeness, or timeliness. Reference herein to any product, process, or service does not constitute or imply endorsement or recommendation by TTAC unless expressly stated.

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