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Restaurant Related News
Cancer Down in California as Smoking Rates Plummet
Lung cancer down 19 percent; Smoking rates down 27 percent
By: Joe
Cherner Source: Parts excerpted from the Sacramento Bee
Published: November 18, 2003
SACRAMENTO, California --
Cancers caused by tobacco -- both first hand and secondhand -- have dropped
dramatically in California in the past 12 years, a sign that the state's
award-winning smokefree ad campaign and popular smokefree workplace law
have had enormous benefits, a new state report has found.
The report by the state
Department of Health Services found that between 1988 and 1999, tobacco-caused
cancers fell 12 percent among men and 8 percent among women in California. Lung
cancer, the disease most associated with smoking, fell 19.5
percent.
"Seeing dramatic results like these if proof that what we have
done here in California has worked," said Diana Bonta, state health director.
"We are seeing the health benefits now."
The results resulted from voter
passage in 1988 of Proposition 99, which taxes tobacco products to pay for
tobacco control programs.
Bonta said sweeping smokefree workplace laws
in California that eliminated smoking in most public places, restaurants and
bars are a large part of the success story.
The newly released report
looked at rates of nine types of cancer related to tobacco use, in various
degrees. They include cancers of the lung, larynx, mouth, esophagus, bladder,
pancreas, kidney, stomach and cervix.
The most dramatic reduction in
cancer rates in California showed up in lung cancers, the #1 cancer-killer of
both men and women. Between 1988 and 1999, lung cancer rates in California
dropped 19.5 percent, from 71.9 cases per 100,000 people to 57.9 in
1999.
California's cancer case rate in 1999 was more than 10 percent
lower than in the rest of the United States.
The report released last
week also found that the program's benefits are unfortunately not enjoyed
equally. Poor Californians and those with less education smoke far more than
affluent people and those who are better educated.
African Americans had
the highest smoking rates in 2000 and are therefore most affected by
tobacco-caused cancers. The mortality rate for tobacco-caused cancers is 30
percent higher for African American men than for white men and 20 percent
higher for African American women that among white women.
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