Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Laurel Hill urges stores to stop selling flavored tobacco


The City Council has unanimously adopted a resolution that urges local retailers to stop selling flavored tobacco following a presentation by two students.

Students Working Against Tobacco members Shania Weekley, 15, and Gage Bailey, 16, gave a PowerPoint presentation opposing the products that particularly attract younger customers. Teens think bidis — Indian hand-rolled cigarettes — and hookahs taste better and seem safer than cigarettes, according to U.S. Food and Drug Administration studies.

The FDA also reports that some tobacco companies’ internal memos indicate marketing efforts for youth-targeted cigarettes.

A clerk at Laurel Hill’s Tom Thumb said the store sells about 40 types of flavored tobacco.

A popular chewing tobacco brand can offer several flavors, Bailey said.

“It can be found in peach, apple and even chocolate flavors,” he said.

Flavored tobacco acts as a “starter” product that can lead to tobacco addiction, according to the FDA’s website.

“Almost all of Florida has a city or county with a resolution” discouraging the sale of such products, Weekley said.

The city of Crestview approved a similar resolution last year.

Following the students’ presentation, the Laurel Hill City Council adopted a resolution that urges local retailers to stop selling flavored tobacco products, informs nwfdailynews.com.

Students Working Against Tobacco is a statewide youth organization that opposes tobacco use and aims its message at youths, according to the Florida Department of Health’s website.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

More smokers in the Netherlands


The number of smokers in the Netherlands will have risen to 26.2% of the adult population by the end of this year, anti-smoking lobby Stivoro says on its website.

In 2011, the percentage of over-18s who smoke was 25%, but that will go up by 170,000 people this year, research by TNS Nipo shows.

The organisation blames the increase on the relaxation of the smoking ban in small cafes and the removal of help with stopping smoking from the basic health insurance package, reports DutchNews.nl.

‘Government policy appears to have directly influenced the number of smokers,’ Stivoro director Dewi Segaar, said in a statement.