Stay Informed

Sign up for news & alerts

Already signed up?
Login here

take action
For every $1 states spend dollar sign on substance misuse and addiction, 94 cents go to shovel up the consequences instead of for treatment and prevention. TELL YOUR LEGISLATORS

What Can I Do?



Continuing Education
Free online courses for addiction counselors LEARN ONLINE

Get Help
Need alcohol or drug help for yourself or someone else? GET HELP

 

U.S. Teens and Adults Choose Same Brand of Cigarettes
February 17, 2009

Share Share Email
Email
Print
Print
SubscribeSubscribe
News Summary

Teen smokers and adult smokers agree that the Marlboro brand is their cigarette of choice, and anti-smoking advocates say advertising is the reason why, the Associated Press reported Feb. 12.

A new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows that three brands of cigarettes -- Marlboro, Newport and Camel -- were preferred by 81 percent of middle- and high-school students. Survey results show that 52 percent of established smokers in high-school chose Marlboro, while 21 percent chose Newport and 13 percent preferred Camel; the middle school percentages were 43, 26 and 9 percent, respectively.

The CDC analyzed data from the 2004 and 2006 National Youth Tobacco Survey of nearly 5 million 12- to 17-year-olds, drawing on survey responses from 54,301 regular smokers. The conclusions parallel those in the 2007 National Study on Drug Use and Health, which found the same three brands to be the most popular smoked by U.S. adults.

Despite evidence that smoking rates are on the decline among teenagers, anti-smoking advocates said that cigarette advertising that ostensibly targets adults has influenced the teenage audience. "Cigarettes are still the most heavily advertised drug in America," said Victor Strasburger, a spokesman for the American Academy of Pediatrics.

David Sutton of the Altria Group, which owns Philip Morris USA and the Marlboro brand, said that adult influence contributes more significantly to teen smoking than advertising, while David Howard, a spokesman for Camel manufacturer R.J. Reynolds, said that the brand's third-place ranking in the survey is evidence that the company is successfully avoiding marketing to young people.  

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by Dwayne Polidori on 18 Feb 09 12:53 PM EST
Yes the company is successful in marketing addiction and poison the the federal gov backs full heatedly their product should be bannnn

Posted by Dwayne Polidori on 18 Feb 09 12:57 PM EST
typing mistake meant to say full heartily sorry

Posted by Bill Godshall on 18 Feb 09 04:59 PM EST
The spokesman for the Academy of Pediatrics is wrong. Drug companies spend more money advertising sex pills (for treating erectile dysfunction) than is spent advertising cigarettes. The article also failed to acknowledge that cigarette brand preferences for teen smokers are similar to brand preferences for adult smokers.

SUBMIT A COMMENT:

Note: Comments are now held for moderator approval. More info

Name:

Comment:
(limit 250
words)

Enter this word
(help):
Change

GUIDELINES: 
Please keep comments on-topic, courteous, clean, non-commercial, and within the word limit.
Read the complete guidelines