The Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco (SRNT) bills itself as “the only professional association dedicated exclusively to the support of researchers, academics, treatment professionals, government employees, and the many others working across disciplines in the field of nicotine and tobacco research.”
The organization claims that it advances the field of nicotine and tobacco research by working with groups including the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Control and Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, the National Cancer Institute (NCI), and the National Institute on Drug Abuse. While those relationships are appropriate, SRNT’s bragging about its “close relationships” with the Truth Initiative, the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids (CTFK), the Association for the Treatment of Tobacco Use Dependence, and the American Cancer Society is unseemly, given those groups’ open hostility to any research or data supportive of nicotine, tobacco or tobacco harm reduction.
Responding to the CDC losing $310 million for its Office on Smoking and Health (OSH), SRNT published a “Nicotine & Tobacco Research Community Call to Action.”
The call to action links to a CTFK letter, dated April 30, that argues for continued CDC OSH funding: “The elimination of CDC’s Office on Smoking and Health would have a profoundly negative impact on our nation’s efforts to reduce the death and disease caused by tobacco…OSH has provided grants to all 50 states and territories to support tobacco prevention and cessation programs. Comprehensive state and local tobacco control programs…OSH has provided funding to state quitlines…With $310 million, CDC will be able to address the challenges posed by e-cigarettes…”
Stated more accurately, if the CDC loses this funding, it will no longer be able to pursue its stated goal of achieving nationwide tobacco prohibition.
SRNT emphasizes the prime reason they support continued funding for their CDC piggybank: “More than ever, we need to explain how tobacco impairs health, why people continue to use tobacco, and what can be done to reduce tobacco-related deaths.”
In reality
The only tobacco use that impairs health is smoking;
2. People use tobacco because it is pleasant and satisfying; and,
3 We can reduce tobacco-related deaths by reducing smoking.
This bit of federal spending reduction may actually promote public health, “more than ever.”
No comments:
Post a Comment