U.S. Surgeon General Report

New Read the 2012 Surgeon General Report, Preventing Tobacco Use Among Youth and Young Adults, which discusses reducing youth smoking as a way to cut future smoking rates. Reductions in youth and adult smoking rates have stalled over the last few years, and research shows that keeping youth from starting smoking before age 26 is effective in keeping them from becoming addicted to nicotine and smoking. The initial message by Kathleen Sebelius, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, points out:

"Each day in the United States, over 3,800 young people under 18 years of age smoke their first cigarette, and over 1,000 youth under age 18 become daily cigarette smokers. The vast majority of Americans who begin daily smoking during adolescence are addicted to nicotine by young adulthood."

In December 2010, the U.S. Surgeon General published the report, How Tobacco Smoke Causes Disease: The Biology and Behavioral Basis for Smoking-Attributable Disease ("Report") The Report describes in detail the specific pathways by which tobacco smoke damages the human body, and makes new conclusions and recommendations regarding secondhand smoke and smoking. The Report concluded: "There is no safe level of exposure to tobacco smoke. Any exposure to tobacco smoke - even an occasional cigarette or exposure to secondhand smoke - is harmful... and that damage from tobacco smoke is immediate."

Key Recommendations from the Report:

Key Report Findings: Damage from exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke is immediate:

Read the Surgeon General's Report, Fact Sheet, and press release at http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/tobaccosmoke/index.html

Key statements from the Associated Press' December 9, 2010 story on the Report:

If you're a smoker or tobacco user, review our NJ Cessation Resources.

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Last update: 3/10/11