Posted on 12/26/2003 1:59:44 PM PST by neverdem
Lying in the name of public health
A recent study by researchers at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that the most popular brands of smokeless tobacco in this country are the ones with the highest levels of readily absorbed nicotine. For the researchers, the finding was an opportunity to once again mislead the public about the hazards of oral snuff.
"Consumers need to know that smokeless tobacco products...are not safe alternatives to smoking," said co-author Patricia Richter of the CDC's Office on Smoking and Health. "The amount of nicotine absorbed per dose from using smokeless tobacco is greater than the amount of nicotine absorbed from smoking one cigarette."
No one claims smokeless tobacco is completely safe, but it is indisputably safer than cigarettesby a very wide margin. Obscuring this fact, as the public health establishment routinely does, leaves smokers with the impression that they have nothing to gain by switching to snuff, when the truth is that they can dramatically reduce their risks, as University of Alabama oral pathologist Brad Rodu has been pointing out for years.
Richter's nicotine comparison might lead unwary readers to believe that using smokeless tobacco is more dangerous than smoking cigarettes. Yet nicotine itself plays little or no role in the diseases associated with smoking.
Nicotine does not cause lung cancer or other respiratory illnesses. And according to a 1999 editorial in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, "the epidemiologic and experimental data suggest that nicotine absorbed from smokeless tobacco, nicotine gum or transdermal nicotine is not a significant risk factor for accelerating coronary artery disease or causing acute cardiovascular events."
Like chewing nicotine gum or wearing a nicotine patch, using smokeless tobacco does not involve inhaling combustion products, the main source of smoking-related hazards. Oral cancer is the only well-established life-threatening danger associated with smokeless tobacco, and even that disease is twice as common among cigarette smokers.
Furthermore, as an article in this month's issue of the journal Tobacco Control explains, the oral cancer risk does not show up in studies of smokeless tobacco users in Sweden, where the typical curing, processing, and storage methods result in lower concentrations of carcinogens. The authors argue that "the availability of snus [Swedish-style oral snuff] appears to have contributed to the unusually low rate of smoking among Swedish men by helping them transfer to a notably less harmful form of nicotine dependence."
In the same issue, British anti-smoking activist Clive Bates and five European scientists note that "Sweden has the lowest levels of tobacco-related mortality in the developed world by some distance." They call upon the European Union to lift its misguided ban on snus, which applies in all member countries except Sweden.
Bates and his co-authors estimate that snus and some American smokeless tobacco products "are at least 90% less hazardous than cigarette smoking." They argue that it is "ethically wrong to actively deny users the option to reduce their risk in this way," calling the E.U. ban a triumph for the "health professional's authoritarian insistence that the only valid choice for smokers is to quit or die."
The same attitude underlies false statements about smokeless tobacco by American public health officials. A set of "Tips for Teens" from the Department of Health and Human Services, for instance, answers a flat "no" to the question, "Isn't smokeless tobacco safer to use than cigarettes?"
In congressional testimony last June, Surgeon General Richard Carmona likewise insisted "there is no significant evidence that suggests smokeless tobacco is a safer alternative to cigarettes." Perhaps Carmona is simply misinformed, in which case Congress should not turn to him for expert guidance on health-related matters. But surely some of his advisers know better.
Someone, in other words, is lying to us in the name of public health. The rationale is that, even though switching to smokeless tobacco might make sense from the perspective of an individual smoker, awareness of this alternative ultimately could lead to more tobacco use.
Given the huge difference in risk between cigarettes and snuff, a net increase in tobacco-related disease is highly unlikely. More to the point, the decision to tell the truth should not depend upon a collectivist calculus by public health functionaries accustomed to treating people like a herd of cattle. Individuals should have access to accurate information about health risks, even when the government's nannies do not trust them to use it properly.
I wonder what the nannies do for a good time.
LOL, I used to have an E7 in one platoon in the military who was from American Samoa. He was a funny guy. Anyway, he smoked Salems. Once the Shoppette ran out and he was left smoking Marlboros for a while. One of the guys drove to a different city (different post) and bought him some Salems and brought them back for him. He lit one up and the look on his face was priceless. His eyes went glassy and he just enjoyed his cigarette. After a few minutes he said in his heavy Samoan accent 'You know man, your own brand or cigarette hurts you just the right way'.
No kidding.
Anybody that has ever done both can tell you that its a lot easier to quit smoking. But there are benefits
the people that wrinkle up their nose when you smoke seriously dont like it when youre spitting into a soda can, Styrofoam cup, or the trash can.
LOL. On the rare occasion that I would run out of smokes in the field I would bum some dip from one of the guys. I used to swallow the spit and the dip itself in order to get a good fix out of it.
I went to a new junior high school in a Minneapolis suburb, Carl Sandburg Junior High. Sandburg himself came to help dedicate the school. While touring one classroom, he wrote on a blackboard, "Fint som snus," which means "Fine as snuff" in Swedish. Apparently the Swedes have been doing the stuff for a long time.
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