Lorillard
Statement by Joseph A. Califano, Jr. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Before the Subcommittee on Health and the Environment of the House Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee 780215
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- Author
- Califano, J.A., J.R.
- Area
- LEGAL DEPT FILE ROOM
- Alias
- 03745410/03745428
- Type
- SPCH, SPEECH/PRESENTATION
- TRAN, TRANSCRIPT
- Recipient (Organization)
- House Interstate + Foreign Commerce
- Subcomm on Health + the Environment
- Named Person
- Surgeon General
- Named Organization
- Dept of the Treasury
- Ftc, Federal Trade Commission
- Hew, Dept of Health Education and Welfare
- Natl Inst of Child Health + Human D
- Natl Interagency Council on Smoking
- NCI, Natl Cancer Inst
- Office of Education
- Office on Smoking + Health
- Public Health Service
- American Cancer Society
- Ftc, Federal Trade Commission
- Document File
- 03745010/03745447/Hew's Anti Smoking Campaign Vol 1 2 790100 - 790523.
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Characteristic
- MARG, MARGINALIA
- Site
- N14
- Request
- R1-004
- R1-037
- Master ID
- 03745010/5826
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STATEMENT
. BY
JOSEPH A. CALIFANO, JR.
SECRETARY OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE
BEFORE THE
SUBCOMMITTEE ON HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT
OF THE
HOUSE INTERSTATE AND FOREIGN COMMERCE COMMITTEE
February 15, 1978'
.

I
Mr. Chairman, and Members of the Subcommittee: I
appreciate this opportunity to appear before you this
morning to discuss the extremely important subject of
smoking and the public health. You have long been leaders
in the health field and so it is appropriate that you should
hold this hearing on a subject of great concern to our
nation.
Last month, on the fourteenth anniversary of the Surgeon
General's Report, I renewed the commitment of the Department
of Health, Education, and Welfare to inform the American
people about the dangers of smoking in a speech to the National Interagency Council on Smoking and
Health.
That speech -- and subsequent commentary and debate --
has focused attention again on the health and economic
problems posed by cigarette use. I welcome that discussion;
only with robust debate can we develop a new public consciousness
and an appropriate public policy about smoking --the single
greatest cause of disease and premature death in this country
today.
,
I also welcome the opportunity to report to you today
_on HEW''s anti-smoking effort -- its goals, its main components,
and its limitations. I also hope to persuade some of the
program's more intemperate critics that their concern --like
their rhetoric -- is greatly exaggerated.

-z-
At the heart of HEW,"s anti-smoking program is a deep
'commitment to informed personal choice. I would emphasize
the word personal because ours is not primarily a regulatory
effort that seeks by rules to change behavior. Nor, even
less, is it a prohibitionist campaign designed'to outlaw
cigarette consumption.
Rather our anti-smoking initiatives are primarily in
education and research. Education to better inform Americans
especially young Americans -- about the hazards of smoking
so that a decision to start or to~continue smoking is based,
as
fully as possible, on a sound foundation of fact. Research
to understand better unanswered questions about why people
smoke and how they can effectively stop if they wish to do so.
Make no mistake, our efforts are to reduce smoking.
But they are efforts grounded in persuasion and information
that appeal to:the common sense of our citizens. They are
not efforts based on coercion and scare tactics.
I have the greatest empathy for the millions of Americans
who want to stop smoking, but who find it very, very difficult
to do so~. Quitting smoking was
have ever done.
one of the hardest things I

- 3 -
Thus, contrary to those who charge that our efforts are
somehow an intrusion on individual liberties, I must underscore
that~our primary goal is to provide information and conduct
research that will enhance,
not reduce, personal choice. If
our citizens -- especially those in their teens and subteens who
begin smoking for the first time -- are given all the facts
from government, or other sources, and still do not wish to
give up a personal habit, however hazardous, then, except
for protecting,the rights of non-smokers, I think government
can properly do no more.
The Problem~
I must also emphasize that the anti-smoking effort is
premised on a bedrock fact -- cigarette smoking is harmful
to individuals and is a multi-billion dollar public health
problem for the nation. It is also a major problem for the
federal government which in fiscal 1976 paid approximately $40:
billion of the nation's $139 billion health bill.
Smoking is preventable Public Health Enemy Number One.
Those who smoke are committing slow mition sucide.
Scientists and physicians -- professionals who are
generally cautious in their use of language -- agree that
smoking is a major cause of heart disease, respiratory
disease, and cancer of the lung and other sites. These are
not abstract dangers to our health, but very real diseases.
And imthe view of scores of scientists who have studied the
problem for decades, both~in this nation and around the world,

4
the link between these diseases an&smoking is "overwhelming."
Representatives of the tobacco industry who q!uestion the
overwhelming evidence do a disservice to science and to the
public. They insist, for example, that not every smoker
has been shown to develop lung cancer, but they fail to .
acknowledge that smokers are approximately ten times more
susceptible to lung cancer than non-smokers.
In~fact, the evidence of the serious consequences of
smoking has been most dramatically acknowledged by health
professionals themselves. Physicians, dentists and
pharmacists are the leaders among those who have quit smoking.
In 19501about 65 percent of America's physicians smoked.
By 1975, 10 years after the Surgeon General's Report, only
21 percent were smokers.
Last year, it has been estimated that more than 320,000
people in this country died prematurely from diseases
attributable to smoking. Smoking was a major contributor to
175,000 deaths from heart disease, 100,000 deaths from
cancer, and 15,000 deaths from chronic bronchitis and
emphysema. Over 37 million people --one out of every six
American alive today -- will die years before they otherwise
would, because of smoking.

5
Some individuals are at especially high risk of smoking-
related'disease and death.
o Those who are more susceptible to heart
disease, emphysema or lung cancer because
of other risk factors, are compounding their
risk dramatically if they smoke.
o Those who work in certain industries and
are expose&to occupational hazards such as
asbestos, aluminum, coal, cotton and steel,
will find those hazards much more harmful if
they smoke than if they do not..
o Those women over 30 who use oral contraceptives
are about 5 to 10 times more likely to die
from heart disease than those who use birth
control pills but do not smoke -- and smoking
increases the heart disease death rate for
women on birth control pills by 40 percent.
The economic toll that these diseases impose on the
country is also enormous. It has been estimated that in
1975 from $5 to $7 billion,were required'to treat smoking-
related related illnesses. Another $12 to $18 billion T.rere lost in
productivity in the work place due to absenteeism related to
smoking. These costs do not reflect wages or productivity
lost due to early death, nor do they reflect the costs of
household fires -- about 13 percent of which are estimated
to be related to smoking.

6
The most troublesome aspect of the problems related to
smoking, in my view, is the fact that so many Americans
start smoking at a very early age, as a result, in part, of
expensive cigarette advertising campaigns. In fact, each
day of the year approximately 4,000 children become cigarette
smokers. -
Seventy-five percent of American adults who smoke
started before they were 21 years old. Ninety percent of
today's smokers started smoking before age 25. These startling
statistics indicate that to a very considerable degree,
smoking in America is a problem of young people.
Indeed, teen-age girls are now smoking more heavily
than ever in the past. Since 1968, the percentage of
teenage girls who smoke has more than doubled, so that the
difference in smoking rates between teenage girls and boys
has virtually disappeared. In 1969', 10 percent of all
teenage girls who smoked used at least a pack a day. -Now,
39 percent of the teenage girls who use cigarettes smoke at
least a pack a day. Thus, more teenage girls are smoking
>
now and they are heavier smokers than ever before._ ,

- 7-
Moreover, the rate of teenage smoking is apparently on
the rise -- and teenagers are starting to smoke at even
younger ages.
Teenagers and children who make the decision to smoke
V
i
I
a
are often not doing so with the benefit of a fully informed
perspective about the hazards of smoking. They are often
responding to a half a billion dollar advertising campaign
which portrays smoking as attractive and mature. When those
young people become adults, they discover that smoking is
neither adult nor sexy. It is extremely difficult to quit
because smoking can often be addictive. Fully 80 percent of
the adults who smoke would like to quit if they could find
an easy way to do it, and over half have tried unsuccessfully
to quit.
Finally, health authorities have demonstrated that the
increased mortality rate for smokers is significantly higher
for those who start smoking as adolescents than for those
who acquire the habit later in life.
Let me underscore the great danger smoking poses to
teenagers by describing four 16 year olds -- a boy and girl
who start smoking at that age and a boy and girl who do
not:
cow
~
~
Xb
j `-

8
The two who smoke (assuming a pack a day)~
will have a 1 in 20 chance of developing lung
cancer over their lifetime; the boy and girl
who do not smoke will have only a 1 in 200~
chance of suffering from the same disease.
o The two who smoke will have 6 chances in 10
of having a'heart attack; the two who don't
smoke have only 3 chances in 10. The 16 year
old smokers are doubling their lifetime risk of
heart attacks by smoking.
o The two who smoke have 1 chance in 20 of
developing chronic bronchitis or emphysema;
the two who don't smoke have only 1 chance
in 200 of suffering from the same diseases.
Thus, over their lifetime, the 16 year olds who smoke
will have a 1 in 10 chance of developing a serious lungg
disease such as lung cancer, emphysema, or chronic bronchitis,
providing they manage not to have a heart attack. By
contrast, the 16 year olds who do not smoke will have a 1 in
100 chance of contracting a serious lung disease over their
lifetime.

9
Most strikingly, the life expectancy of the 16 year
old make smoker is 65 years (at one pack a day) or 62 years
(at two packs a day); the life expectancy for the 16 year o1d
male non-smoker is 71 years. Similarly, the life expectancy
of a 16 year old female smoker is 72 years (at one pack a
day) and 70 years (at two packs a day): the life-expectancy
of a 16 year old female non-smoker is 78 years.
Thus, at the heart of the anti-smoking effort is a
deep concern about smoking health effects =young,people.
