WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration is launching the government’s largest effort yet to curb tobacco use among at-risk teens.
The $115 million media campaign stems from the FDA’s new authority to regulate tobacco, granted by a 2009 law, says commissioner Margaret Hamburg. The ads will target the roughly 10 million American teens who are open to smoking or are already experimenting with cigarettes, she says.
That investment “is one of the most important efforts in recent times in the effort to reduce youth smoking,” says Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. “The FDA has carefully researched which ads will have the greatest impact on at-risk youth. These were designed with the same scientific rigor that Madison Avenue uses to market its products.”
Many “at-risk” kids see smoking as a temporary coping mechanism to help them deal with the “chaos” caused by poverty, violence or family turmoil, said Mitch Zeller, director of the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products.
“We are not talking about happy-go-lucky kids,” Zeller said. “They don’t see themselves as smokers. They think they will be able to quit.”
Although the first round of ads will aim for a broad audience, later campaigns will target specific groups, such as gay teens and Native Americans, Zeller said. Ads from the campaign, called “The Real Cost,” will run on MTV, in Teen Vogue, on YouTube and other social media.
The ads are based on studies that show teens are often more worried about their appearance today than their long-term risk of cancer, Zeller said.
One of the videos features a girl trying to buy cigarettes at a convenience store. When a clerk tells her that she doesn’t have enough money, the girl reluctantly scrapes off part of her cheek, revealing ugly wrinkles beneath, then hands her youthful skin to the clerk.
The campaign comes on the heels of a new surgeon general report, released last month, which calculated that 5.6 million American children will die from tobacco-related illness, unless the country takes immediate action to lower smoking rates. About 3,200 teens try their first cigarette each day and 700 become life-long smokers, Hamburg says
The educational effort stems from the FDA’s expanded authority to regulate tobacco, provided by the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act of 2009.
The FDA cited the 2009 law when it created graphic warning labels for cigarette packs. A federal appeals court struck down those warning labels in 2012.
Although the FDA has asserted its intention to regulate electronic cigarettes, the ads won’t mention them. The agency has not yet issued regulations for e-cigarettes, which contain nicotine but no tobacco.
The media campaign is one of three major anti-smoking efforts this year.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week relaunched its “Tips from Former Smokers” campaign, which began in 2012. That effort, costing $48 million to $60 million each year, has been credited with helping 100,000 Americans quit smoking.
The “truth” campaign — run by the anti-smoking group Legacy — will also launch a media campaign this summer, said Robin Koval, the group’s president and CEO. The truth campaign — funded by the Master Settlement Agreement between tobacco companies and the states – has been credited with preventing 450,000 young people from smoking from 2000 to 2004 can find on this page.
Yet Myers said these efforts are dwarfed by the tobacco industry, which spends more than $8 billion a year on marketing.
* This news story was resourced by the Oral Cancer Foundation, and vetted for appropriateness and accuracy.
Leave A Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.