Univera Healthcare report - teen smoking on the rise in Upstate New York..

March 7. 2011 - A new report issued Friday, March 4th by a local health care organization shows a rise in smoking among teens in upstate New York, mirroring a nationwide trend. Meanwhile, trends that once showed a decline in adult smoking rates have begun to level off.

“This is a disturbing set of findings because of its implications for the future,” said Dr. Robert Holzhauer, vice president and chief medical officer for Univera Healthcare, which prepared a fact sheet on cigarette smoking in New York. “Lives are shortened unnecessarily, and billions of dollars are spent to treat illnesses caused by this deadly habit,” Holzhauer added. “Those dollars could be better used to treat less preventable conditions.”

Univera’s report shows that nearly 15 percent of high school students in 2009 smoked cigarettes on at least one of 30 days prior to a survey, up from nearly 14 percent two years prior. In addition, 13.3 percent smoked more than 10 cigarettes per day over the survey period, an increase from 12.4 percent in 2007.

Smoking rates among New York state adults peak in the 18- to 24-year old demographic, at 28.7 percent.

Univera’s report also shows that approximately 815,000 adults across all of upstate — or 21.3 percent, a slight increase from previous years — are smokers, compared to 18 percent for the state and 17.9 percent for the nation. In Western New York, the rate is 20.5 percent.

Simply put, Univera’s report says “national, state and local data indicate that progress toward reduced smoking rates has stalled. Although U.S. adult smoking rates declined from 1998 to 2008, there was no significant change from 2008 to 2009.”

There is some positive news, the report says, noting that upstate New York adults are cutting back as the percentage who reported smoking every day dropped to 15 percent last year from 19.4 percent in 2000.


The report also lauds action taken to allow the Food and Drug Administration the authority to regulate tobacco manufacturing and marketing. It’s all in an effort to meet the objectives of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-sponsored Healthy People 2020, an initiative whose aim is to lower adult smoking rates to 12 percent.

Reference: Report says teen smoking on the rise, Staff Reports Niagara Gazette, 3/6/2011.

2 comments:

  glad

March 20, 2012 at 9:13 PM

What is the reason behind the sudden rise? Could it be possible that the parents are just letting their teens become smokers or are they doing something to stop it? Teen smoking is common because they can see other adults doing it so they try to do it also, teens could also have been influenced by their friends or they just want to experience it and got addicted to it. No matter the reason is we should help our teens stop smoking while it is not yet too late.

  Anonymous

December 26, 2012 at 9:52 PM

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