Philly smoking rates at lowest level in years
Source: Philadelphia Inquirer
Smoking rates in Philadelphia have reached their lowest levels in recent history, city officials announced Thursday. Smoking among adults in the city has fallen by almost 15 percent since 2008, Health Commissioner Donald F. Schwarz said at an event marking the American Cancer Society's 37th annual Great American Smokeout.
In Philadelphia, 40,000 adults have given up smoking since 2008, Schwarz said, attributing the drop to the city's Clean Indoor Air Law, a federal hike in the cigarette tax, and the "Get Healthy Philly" initiative. The decline is particularly sweet because it comes after a decade of relatively stable smoking levels when "we just weren't able to turn the tide," said Giridhar Mallya, the Health Department's director of policy and planning.
Studies have backed the city's approach, especially raising cigarette prices. But Schwarz said the city is constrained by state limits on cigarette prices. Raising those would be the easiest way to drive further decline, he said.
So the city attacks smoking through other avenues, such as decreasing "the amount of acreage" available for smokers. The news conference was held at the Restaurant School at Walnut Hill College, which Schwarz praised for becoming the city's first (and only) college to ban smoking. The ban caused complaints, president Daniel Liberatoscioli said, but was worth it.
Read more: http://www.philly.com/philly/health/20121116_Philly_smoking_rates_at_lowest_level_in_years.html
Good news for health. Smoking is one of the top financial drains on Obamacare.