Philip Morris
An Evaluation of the Phs Clearinghouse
Fields
- Area
- BOWLING,JAMES/CARLSTADT
- Type
- NELE, NEWSLETTER
- Document File
- 1003042707/1003043003/56b19 43 Jim Bowling Legal Dept Files
- Litigation
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- Named Organization
- Amer Journal of Public Health
- Amer Public Health Assn
- Bureau of Budget
- Congress
- County Council on Smoking & Health
- Ctr, Council for Tobacco Research
- Disease Control & Cancer Control
- Etv
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- Hew, Dept of Health Education and Welfare
- Interagency Councils on Smoking & H
- Interagency Committee on Smoking &
- Natl Assn of Educational Broadcaste
- Natl Center for Behavior Change
- Natl Clearinghouse on Smoking & Hea
- NCI, Natl Cancer Inst
- Ncsh
- Presidents Commission on Heart Dis
- Public Health Service
- Tobacco Reporter
- Acs
- Amer Assn of School Administrators
- Amer Public Health Assn
- Site
- N7
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- 1003042965/3004b
Related Documents:- 1003042965-2966 Summary of Recent News and Editorial Comment
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- 1003043004A the Tobacco - Health Question
- 1003043004B Tobacco Has 'gain Only' in Research
- Named Person
- Hammond, E.C.
- Horn
- Horn, D.
- Magnuson
- Sparer, G.
- Surgeon General
- Tomkins, S.
- Waingrow, S.
- Horn
- Author (Organization)
- Natl Clearinghouse on Smoking & Hea
- Tobacco Reporter
- Request
- Stmn/R1-004
- Stmn/R1-133
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
- dvg74e00
Document Images
An Evaluation of the PHS
CLEARINGHOUSE
Basic purpose of the National Clearinghouse on Smoking and Health
is to inform people about cigarette smoking and encourage them to quit,
however ...
Clearinghouse spokesman describes the Clearinghouse program as the
"first effort for mass behavior change on a national level."
Results could also be applied to control of liquor or narcotics con-
` t sumption, say Clearinghouse spokesmen or even politics.
Clearinghouse is on an accelerating budget apparently cleared by PHS
that would boost the current $2.7 million to an annual $12.5 million
'by 1972 - and the program is to expand by communities as budget
~
grows
.
:
.~:.,~-~ ,. : . .... . . . _ .,..
, . . . _.~: . , - _g,r~. . . .~.:.
~ ...
. . ..
Application of a new cost-benefit ratio for comparing disease control
,'programs could result in further expansion of the program, including
wider use of mass media, and a budget of some $31.5 million annually
'
house on Smoking
and Health is
National Clearin
g
spending some $2.7 million in federal funds to "change
behavior" of U. S: cigarette smokers this year - that is, to
get them to stop smoking.
Interestingly, the Public Health Service has approved a
budget that would accelerate this to an annual $12.5 million
by 1972 - and if estimates of effectiveness of propaganda
campaigns prove accurate, federal supportof the anti-smoking
program may increase to an annual $31.5 million by 1972,
under application of a new cost-benefit formula being used
to compare effectiveness of various Health, Education and
Welfare programs.
~ .1 . . On Changing Behavior
- About a year ago the President's Commission on Heart
Disease, Cancer and Stroke recommended a$500;000 Public
Health Service project to set up a Center for Research in
Health Motivation. It was described as follows: 'In addition
to specific behavioral studies directed at the individual
decision making process in changing patterns of living, the
Center would' analyze the contents of public campaign ma-
terials with reference to their effectiveness and influence
^ upon behavior, and it would hopefully concentrate particular
attention upon hard-to-reach population groups which reject
existing educational campaigns emphasizing individual initi-
arive and changes in living patterns."
Although this particular recommendation has not yet
been acted'upon, the National'Clearinghouse on Smoking and
Health, an agency of the Public Health Service set up in
September, 1965, seems to be operating along very similar
lines.
"A better name for the Clearinghouse would
be National Center for Behavior Change," com-
ments a member of the Clearinghouse staff, who
points out that the Clearinghouse is involved in
the first nation-wide program devoted to chang-
ing behavior on a national level.
-- ----
' He adds that the staff is quite excited about
'athe project, noting that no real advances have been
..«r~;,t,~;made in this area since the rash of "'subliminal"
messages several years ago that supposedly sent
consumers dashing out for products as a result of
~' '--
:~ .March / 19( 7 3~ii~~ ~.4 ~~
... ~
messages flashed onto movie and television screens
too rapidly to be consciously noticed by the viewer.
~'-` -~ And he observes, "If a 'safe' cigarette is de-
veloped it won't put us out of business . . . " since
the same basic program can also be applied to
liquor and narcotics control, used in other national
education programs and even politics.
Dr. Daniel Horn, head of the Clearinghouse, tells Tobacco
Reporter that he is leary about describing his goal as
"behavior change." He says, "Use of that term makes it
awfully easy for people to look at us and think we re trying
to get people to do things they don't want to do." He points
out that studies indicate that a large percentage of current
cigarette smokers have tried to give up cigarettes -- thus, '
he believes, they want to change. ~
Nevertheless the term "behavior change" is one that has ~~
been repeatedly used by Dr. Horn, and the current Clearing-
house program is built around a theoretical model drawn up
by Dr. Horn and Selwyn Waingrow, his special assistant, and
presented at the American Public Health Association under
the title, "Some Dimensions of' a Model for Smoking Behavior
Change."
Dr. Horn has commented to the American Association of
School' Administrators, "We are in rather a new area in
smoking ed'ucation, Unlike trying to motivate people to do
something once, like getting a chest x-ray or a tetanus shot,
and unlike trying to teach children to do something always
such as "brush your teeth after every meal," we are trying
to persuade people to, NOT do something f orever. So old
techniques, while not necessarily invalid, must be studied
carefully before we place too much faith in them."
(Along these lines Dr. Horn has suggested: "When
the Mathematics teacher discusses graphs could he use lung
cancer death rates? Could the English teacher discuss adver-
tising copy? Might the Civics or History teacher discuss the
_role of Congress and the Federal Trade Commission in
developing consumer safeguards in the effects of industry
+;
-lobbies?)
Dr. Horn sees his project as development of a
pcogram for controlling "gratificacion behavior." "mk
~
_ Continued on following page
,

CLEARINGHOUSE
Continued from preceding page
He notes, "What we are doing here could also be
applied to weight control or used to reduce
alcoholism or even promote use of 'less hazardous'
cigarettes."
He points out, however, that smoking is not like other
forms of gratification behavior. "When you drink too much
you get drunk. When you eat too much you get fat- But
when you exceed an acceptable level of cigarette smoking
you can't see the damage." Thus, he explains, the Clearing-
house's job is to warn~ smokers.
He says that the Clearinghouse wants to intro-
duce "moderation" into smoking habits of those
smokers who refuse to quit by encouraging them
to "take smaller dosages" by smoking fewer ciga-
rettes, lower nicotine and "tar" cigarettes, leaving
longer butts and taking fewer puffs.
.In a pgper recently presented at the American Public
Health Association, Dr. Horn introduccd some findings
about individual' smoking dosage. He notes that in some
cases a smoker may smoke two packs a day and get a relative.
ly low dose, while smokers of 5 to l0 cigarettes a day may
get a high dose - depending on hotu and what they smoke.
He also commented, "Although the prospect of a 'less
hazardous' cigarette that would solve the health problem does
not appear imminent, the possibility remains that changes in
the cigarette combined with changes in the ways in which
people smoke might produce a level of exposure which is
tolerable' for many people. It would remain for research.
of course, to determine what would be the 'tolerable' level
for how many, of which people, under, what conditions. How-
ever, until such levels of 'toleration' are determined the
control task must remain basically oriented' to persuading as
many people as possible to stop their cigarette smoking coni-
pleteiy or not to start in the first place."
What does Dr. Horm think might be an acceptable Ievelc
He says, "Figures for women who smokeless than 5 cigarettes
Here is how HEW cost-6enefit formufa .`
-,;
Last spring the Secretary of Health, Education an&
~` '*Welfare set up task groups to try to apply a new formula
of cost-benefit analysis to several HEW programs.
One of these task groups was Disease Control, which
included sub-task groups, one of which was Cancer Con
trol. These sub-task groups completed their analyses and
the over-all analysis became a program memorandum
which was submitted to the Bureau of the Budget in
to the economy by lives saved per dollar spent by HEW
for each, program. These ratios for the various programs
"` `: The cost-benefit formula projects ratio of dollars saved
December 1966 by the Secretary of HEW.
Health Service - did participate in the committee.)
Dr. Horn an& his staff also prepared alternatives that
would include the current Clearinghouse program plttw
increased' efforts in two areas emphasized in his model,
of' behavior change - intensified use of health pro-
fessionals and greater use of mass communications.
The four alternatives proposed included the curren:
program (Alternative A),' the current program plus in-
creased involvement of health professionals (Alternative
B), the current program plus increased use of mass com-
munication (Alternative C) and a program that involves
all three (Alternative D). Here are comparative figtores
for five-year program under each alternative:
can be compare& and may be used as a tool by HEW to
compare effectiveness of' various programs and alternative
programs for controlling various diseases. -
f
i
f
d
f
F gures or each program inclu e a ive-year cost o
Cast
(aiillians d.
dal lan)
-fal.nti.1 Cast Nr Tasal sa.injs Sarinp
a.iMsinIlfa (williansal prd+ Aarr li.as ddilan/ spanr
the program to HEW, nu
mber of li
ves th
at the pr
ogram ALTERNATIVE A
Current program __f46.9
7,000
$6,700
S268
5.7
is estimated to save, conve
income potential that wou
were to die, and expression rsion of t
ld be los
of the c hose l
t if th
ost of ives into
ose indiv
the progr dollar
iduals
am as ALTERNATIVE'8
Current plus more
professionals _-__ 84.9
16,000,
5,300
635
7.3
a ratio to the over-all dolla
Here is how the cancer r savings.
control p
rogram
s fared i
nclud- ALTERNATIVE C
Current plus more
mass media ----- 76.9
13,500
5,700
531
6.9.
ing the anti-smoking cam
Smoking and Health in lun paign of
g cancer c the Cl
ontrol earingho
: use on ALTERNATIVE D
Current plus
Cess
Pat.efinl
Cast'yar Tetal sarings
Sarings professionals and
114.9
di
22
000
5
200
875
7
6
CANCER. (willient a1f sa.ings in lifa (nillians af, Par dallAr mass me
a ------ , , .
dallanl lins. dallon) spanr
Cervical-uterine Under alternative Program A percent of' adult popu-
cancer -------- .5118.1i 34,200 $3,470 $1,071 9 lation who are smokers drops from 40 per cent in
196'
(screening program).
Head and neck to 36 per cent in 1972. Alternative B' it drops to 29 per
cent in, 1972. Alternative C has it dropping to 31 per
cancer
7.8 268 29
100 9 1
1
---------
(detection research) , . cent in 1972,,and Alternative D has percent of adults who
24
i
b
Breast cancer 22:4' 2,396' 7,663 101 4.5 per cent
ng to
are smokers dropp
y 1972. These pro-
(screening program)
Lung cancer -------- 47
7,000
6,400
268
5.7 jections were also estimated by Dr. Horn.
Comments a footnote about the estimate for effect of
(anti-smoking
education program)
The $47 million investment is the 5-year planned
"current ' program, which was only one of four alternative
Dr. Horn's office, according to Gerald Sparer, of the
Secretary's Office, who prepared the over-all report from
the various analyses.
The estimates of potential lives saved used in project-
ing effects of the lung cancer program were supplied by
increased' mass communication, "this is based on assump-
tion that as in 1964' Clearinghouse sample, some 83 per
cent of current smokers are concerned about the health
hazards of' cigarettes and may be considered 'potential
former smokers,' and of the potential former smokers, 15
per cent will actually become former smokers as in smok-
ing withdrawal clinics " According to Mr. Sparer and Dr.
Horn no actual figures are available to show how many
people will stop smoking when exposed' to increased mass
programs considered for lung cancer controf through anti- -- communication "education." However, Dr.
Horn says the
smoking campaigns. (None included a program for de- -- _=fact that doctors are smoking less now than
15 years ago
veloping a"safe" cigarette, although a member of the indicates people will stop smoking when
"educated."
National Cancer Institute - research arm of the Public _ ; This mass communication alternative would
involve.
,r
_.-
-:r`,~
bacco Reporter
- - - _ - _ . ---,---. ~,.

0
a day are about the same as for non-smokers" (The paper
presented'to the APHA also noted that women tend to smoke
lower "'tai " and nicotine cigarettes, according to Dr. Horn.),
He adds that the best level of dosage is none ar all.
Dr. Horns smoking behavior change model being used
by the Clearinghouse includes four basic target populations:
youth in school (elementary, intermediate, secondary, college
and' in organized gcoups)~ adults (industry, clubs and as
parents), professionals (physicians, dentists, nurses, pharma-
cists) and'general public (mass communications).
A look an the current program gives some idea of how
Dr. Horn intends to "change behavioi ° of each of these
populations.
CURRENT PROGRAM
The atrrenr program for the Clearinghouse is financed
by a little more than $2 million in federal fundsplus some
$500,000 which the Clearinghouse awards in grants - the
Presidenes budget for 1968 includes a similar level of
expenditure. Bur this is far less than was cleared at the
Public Health Service ldwell for the Clearinghouse under an
increasing Syear program for the anti-smoking campaign.
A spokesman for the Clearinghouse notes that expendi-
tures for Viet Nam will probably mean it will be at least
1969 before the Clearinghouse can even get started on its
accelerating 5-year program.
Under this program approved at the PHS level the Clear-
inghouse will spend some 346.9 million over the five-year
period - increasing from =5:2 million the firsr year to some
E12:5 million in the fifth year.
According to HEW (which apparently got the infor-
mation from Dr Horn) "a reasonable expectation for re-
ducing cigarette smoking at this level of expenditure over,
the next tive years is 1) Reduction in the number of adult
male smokers by about 10 per eenr 2)i Reduction in the
number of adult female smokers by about 3 per cent; 3) Re-
duction in the number of young people (ages 13-20) who
rake up cigarette smoking by about 15 per cent and' 4)
Continued on following page
®
G
according to the report, development during 1968 of
appropriate materials adapted for mass communications
media, primarily, television. This would' be coupled with
and followed through a series of trials and demonstrations.
Widespread promotion through grants to states and com-
munities would be carried out in 1970, 1971 and 1972.
(According to Dr. Horn use of' mass communication in
no way means use of paid advertisements in these media
- the current NCSH project with educational television
probably is a moresubstantiallclue.) _
Projection B, which is based on increased use of health
professionals, is based on the assumption that physicians
will discuss smoking and'health with 70'per cent of'their
patients rather than 17 per cent as is currently done. (Dr.
Horn apparently has a study that shows this.) And that
patients assisted by physicians using improved techniques
are successful 50 per cent of the time quitting smoking,
rather than the cvrrenr 30 per cent Io also assumes that
dentists will~have as much effect on smoking,habits as
physicians.
Since the more extensive Alternative D seems to offer,
a better cost-benefit ratio than the others, why was "
Alternative A selected as the program submitted in the
Secretary's memorandum to the Budget Department?
Largely, according to Mr. Sparer, because these alternatives
are all based on "professional judgement" He says the
formulas will all be"worked over, reconsidered' and
evaluated in terms of results of this coming years pro- .
gram."
Several "uncertainties" were also mentioned in the
report One was the efforts of other agencies in the area
of smoking and health, which according to the report "are
not known-" - , . .
The report also notes the "effect upon the tobacco
industry and upon tax receipts of the estimated reduction
in smoking- We do not know whether this would be a
cosror a benefitbut we assume analysis would show it to
V be a mixed blessing."
;r r, , . . . . .. . . :. . .
(Editoi s Note: Since about $3.5 billion is collected
annually in federal and'snte cigarette taxes, a reduction by
10 per cent, as under Alternative A, would represent a
eur in tax revenue alone of some $350 million - more
than the $268 million alternative A is said'to represent in
~y}; 3 dollar saving, if one wants to get cotnmercial'about this.)
~`~i The report also notes that savings accrued from re-
~~ ductroa of "death and' disability from causes other than
Lf~~, ar.,: - . ,.r- -.. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . ,.
t
was applied to anti-smoking
Marcb/1967
campaigns
lung cancer; are not reflected in the current figures.
The report; based on information supplied by Dr.
Horn, comments, "It should be emphasized that death and
disability associaced' with smoking gpes much beyond the
problem of lung cancer, which accounts for only approxi-
mately 10-15 per cent of the mortality and 5 per cent of
the disability associated with cigarette smoking."' "We are
looking at this possibility with interest," explains Mr.
Sparer.
Two Other Programs
In analyzing the lung cancer programs in the over-all
memorandum two additional programs were induded,
Alternative E, professional education alone (an expendi-
ttue of $38 million over a five year period) and Alter-
native F, mass media alone (an expenditure of $30 mil+
lion over a five year period )
The report comments, "These two programs (E and'
F) alone have anticipated benefit cost ratios of 9.6 and'
8.8. While a basis for a critical analysis of program
effectiveness for each component does not exist, the pri-
mary preventionpmgram presented ranks with the middle
range of productive programs analyzed in this paper on a-
par with the breast cancer program. Additional support -
appears warranted. Support of' the basic program would
provide data on which to make judgments concerning
further program emphasis. We will be looking txitically
at the basic program to determine if it is possible to trade .
off components of that program against the apparentl~'
more productive components of' Ptograms E aad F."
The report also notea'There has been little actual
experience for these estimates except a study, which indi- ,
rrtes that patients advised to stop smoking by health pro- ..
fessionals are more likely to. If the estimates of program
effectiveness were overstated by 30 per cent or more, and
this ispossible, the pmgram would still warrant suppoa- .
at ftmding levels concemplated, Shtut of severe legd
restrictions on smoking we-have no other weapons to make
significant progress in curtailing lung cancer deatha."
It concludes, "In many respects the lung cancer pre-
vencion program oriented toward smoking curbs is similar
to a number of the motor vehicle programs. Additional ',
emphasis on these educational programs is warranted
because of the reasonably high productivity of these pro-
grams and also in order to test and validate some of the
key assumptions made in estimating benefits and lives
saved If these estimates are not confirmed, shift of
emphasis to other programs would be in otdee , ti`? 4, ,
M
r
11
t
r
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{
i.
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lW
m
[ .~
t'J~'~`~1
11

CLEARINGHOUSE
Continued from preceding page
Encouragement of significant numbers of those who continue
to smoke to use forms of tobacco and techniques oP smoking
which are less hazardbus."
The report confidently notes, "Attainment of this level
of'success among adult smokers could result in the reduction
of' smoking related~ litng cancer deaths by about 4,000 in
1972."
( The charts accompanying this show total percentage of
the population who are adult smokers would be reduced'
from 40 per cenr in 1967 to 36 per cent in 1972 - or a drop
of 10 per cent in number of adult smokers.)
How Horn Plans to Do This
Dr. Horn, a psychologist, has been interested for some
time in changing smoking behavior. His early work included
cooperation with Dr. E. Cuyler Hammond at the American
Cancer Society'on studies of smoking habits and lung cancer
- which formed the background for much of the Surgeon
General's Report.
One of~ his first projects was adaptation of a projective
test to discover why people smoke. He explains that some
time ago he adapted a test similar to the Thematic Apper-
ception Test ("But that was before the TAT even had' a
name;` he notes) for use in studying attitudes toward'smok-
ing. (The TAT makes use of pictures of people in un-
structured situarions: The subject is told to make up a story
to go with the picture or "tell what is going on;" thus sup-
posedly revealing subconscious feelings. To study cigarette
smoking attitudes subjects are asked to respond to pictures in
which the people are holding or smoking cigarettes.) He
says that a test he designed along these lines is now being
used by the Council' for Tobacco Research in Btitain, and
he has given sets of' the pictures to workers in the U., S.,
although no projects of this nature are now being financed!
by the Clearinghouse, "largely because they are too costly in
terms of results." Also, Dr., Horn explains, the responses
were too stereotyped.
Dr. Horn also used some projective testing when he made
a study of youngsters in the Portland school svstem back in
1959. This study in the Porti9nd schools has been the basis
for much of the Clearinghouse approach to anti+smoking
propaganda campaigns. In Portland Dr. Horn used word
association rests along with a battery of' other tests and
questionnaires to discover exactly what approaches could be
most effecrivelr employed to change smoking behavior.
Basically five experimental approaches to changing smok-
ing behavior were tried - long term effects (health), short
term effects (cigarette smell on breath), combined long and
short term effects, authoritarian approach and adult role-
taking. The authoritarian and adult role-taking approaches
were found totally ineffective; shorrterm effects were effeaive
only with giils; the combined approach was apparentlyy
effective to some degree with all of the students;, but the
approach that centered' on the long-term health ; hazard was
most effective with both groups.
However. Dr. Horn,oow describes the people in Pordind
as "unusual,' and interestingly some recent propaganda
efforts of the Clearinghouse have leaned toward short term
effects -"boys don't like to kiss girls wfio smoke, husbands
doa't like wives who smoke - thus non-smokers are more
marriageable, more 'A"students are non-smokers, more 'pooi
people smoke" (Dr. Horn says that a recent study, of college
men in :.fasuchusem shows college men are smoking less.)
A NCSH project now' in progress at the University of
Illinois is"designed to determine whether Horn's Portland study findings continue to be valid in the
light of recent
develbpmeno." :
Horn's ModeliProgram £
~\
The bulk of' the current Clearinghouse budj;qt is going
Horn's theoretical model of smoking'behavior changt;. This
model involves application of a four-step process to each of
four populations - studd:nts, adults, professionals and general
public.
According to Dn Horn's model a smoker must be arot't-
vated to stop (for example by health, issues or to set an
example for his child or student). Hto must then perceite
the threat, realize it is significant, applies specifically to him
and than he can do something about ii,, (Dr. Horn repeatedly
puints out that by quitting, smoking a smoker can reverse
statistical correlations with disease.)
Finalltwo steps involve alternative ptycholbgica!'mechart-
iimr, (these are based on _ paper, Psychologicai Model for
Smoking,Behavior, by Dr. Silvan Tomkins, who says peopl6
smoke for different specific reasons, thus some can give it up
more easily than others. Both Dr. Tomkins' paper and Dt.
Horn's Model tor Smoking Behavior Change appear in tht
American Journal' of Public Health supplement issued last
month by the American Public Health Association ), and
other factors that must facilitate continrting reinforeenoent.
These would include "social forces (including action by
official I and voluntary agencies, whether in the health field
or, not, and legislative bodies at various levels of govern-
ment); interpersonal influences ..., and activity by and
exposure to the matt media, particularly television .., as
facilitating or inhibiting,the change process . . '
Comments the paper, "It is further suggested that other
facilitators or inhibitors in this model of change are the
behavior and' attitudes of certain key groups, such as health
workert in general and phyticisnt in particrdar."'
"Another facilitating or inhibiting factor that warrants
consideration for the change model is the general level of
acceptability of'the behavior tharexists at a given time. The
current general I climate of acceptability of smoking is prob-
ably one of the strong counter-infllrences to those factors
which would otherwise facilitate the cessation of~ smoking..
Restrictionr on the placet and condiiionl tn uhich tmokiAg
ii pennitted, and reduction in the influence of, cigarette
advertiring migh't be tu^o mechanirmt for changing thit
climate.
"However, acceptability, being,a sociall phenomenon, is
subject to social change. With the sharp reduction in
physician smoking that has taken place in the past 15 years,
the acceptability of smoking in physician groups diminished
along with the shrinking clbuds of smoke. A similar re-
duaion in the general population might lead to the same kind
of self-generating reinforcement or 'band-wagon effect "
Dr, Horn seetns to feel chat a certain percentage (ap-
parently, about 83 per cent): of smokers if "educared"' will be-
come non,smoken-an assumption hrseems to base largely
on performance of doctors. He cites the example of doctors
and says that 15 years ago about 60 per cent of doctors smoked
and today4ess than 30 per cent do (or at least say they do):
Dr, Horn is just completing a study on level of doctor smok-
ing and says that less than 30 per cent now say, they are
smokers.
As to why anti-smoking dinics, which supposedly "edu-
cate" smokers, have proved'. ineffective with great regularity
(less than 15 per cent generally give up smoking for more
than a year, according-to Dr, Horn ), he comments, "An odd
selection of people go to antikmoking clinics, most average
people who want to give up smoking try to do it on their
'"
own.
- _
Some Clearinghouse Projects '
A look at some of'the more than 50 project grants and
contract projects now sponsored by the Clearinghouse should
give some idea of'w how an expanding 5-year program migbt
operate. At present the Clearinghouse is financing a number
of research studies on attitude change and development of
"educational" programs and materials. These materials sre
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4.
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13
of state and l'ocali Interagency Councils on Smoking and
Health - which are partly sponsored by the Clearinghouse
grants - through school programs, and through organi-
zational activities also coordinated by the Interagency Coun-
cils using materials partly supplied by the Clearinghouse.
At the present_the program is described as "develop-
mental." As the budget increases efforts will be expanded
to more states and more communities.
Here are some examples of' current Clearinghouse pro-
jects:
The County Health Department in Bakersfield, Calif., is
studying ways of' correlating with~ their school curricvlum
what junior an& senior high school students know about
smoking and health and is exploring techniques for possible
development for use in regular secondary school curriculum.
Two of the largest projects sponsored by the Clearing-
house are five-year project with the San Diego (California)
County Council on Smoking and Health and another with the
Onondaga County (New York): Interagency Committee on
Smoking and' Health. These are community projects designed
to test methods by which organized community action can
change cigarette smoking habits.
The San Diego project has been underway for about a
year and Dr. Horn's office describes results as "encouraging,"
the New York project is only just beginning. In a sense
these are both test markets for the "full" Clearinghouse pro-
gram. They may include, according to a contract desuiption,
everything from "psycho-social studies and research related
to the motivational and behavioral aspects of cigarette smok-
ing" through "educational programs for health professionals"
and "community-wide participation of agencies, organizations,
young people's groups, entertainers and professional organi-
zations most able to exert an influence on the community ..:"
The government has budgeted about $1 million for each of
the,e projects over the next five years.
A Clearinghouse grant under the current pro-
gram of particular interest is a re-interview of
about 3,000 adults 22 and over who were identified
as current smokers and former smokers in a 1964
national survey of smoking attitudes and behavior.
Dr. Horn says among the results of this survey -
which are still not completely tabulated - is
evidence that when a smoker switches -to a lower
"tar" and nicotine cigarette he does not increase
the number of cigarettes that he consumes. Ac-
cording to Dr. Horn some of the smokers increased,
some decreased, but the over-all effect was a slight
decrease in consumption, following a switch to
lower "tar" and nicotine brands.
(This information could well crop up again in
hearings over the bill on nicotine and "tar" label-
ing Senator Magnuson promises to introduce soon..
Incidentally, Dr. Horn says he would not be sur-
prised if hydrogen cyanide and acrolein labels -
both part of the gas phase - were also suggested
as part of that legislation.)
Another Clearinghouse project involves development of
educational television programs on smoking and health: On
the basis of proposals from educational television stations,
support has been provided by the Clearinghouse and National
Association of Educational Broadcasters for production of
programs by some 20 local ETV stations.
March / 1967
,.;, ..
