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New England States Spend Little Tobacco Settlement Money on Prevention
April 15, 2009

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News Summary

Most New England states are funding tobacco-prevention programs at only 20 percent of recommended levels, despite receiving billions in tobacco-settlement money since 1998, the Boston Herald reported April 13.

The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids released a report showing that prevention spending by New England states will amount to only 2.3 percent of the $1.8 billion they will collectively receive this year from the nationwide settlement with tobacco companies. The states should be spending at least 10.5 percent of the funds on prevention, according to recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).

The report showed that Maine and Vermont are the only New England states funding tobacco-prevention programs at even half the CDC's recommended level.

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by Freddie Simons on 22 Apr 09 03:12 PM EDT
The prevention of tobacco use among youth and adults is as neglected as the prevention of alcohol and other drugs are. The reality appears to be that states prefer to allocate increasing amount of money on treating the consequences of use of these substances while ignoring the option of preventing them. One of the major reasons that this occurs is the lack of sufficient levels advocacy by parents and concerned citizen groups. Elected officials need votes. We need to clearly connect our votes to legislative outcomes which demonstrate funding of a public health logic model that helps protect our children, youth and families.

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