Smoking declines 25% among adults in Utah

Progress tallied since anti-tobacco drive started 6 years ago

Published: Saturday, Sept. 10 2005 12:00 a.m. MDT

Smoking among Utah adults has dropped 25 percent since the state initiated aggressive tobacco prevention programs six years ago, according to a new report from the Utah Department of Health.

That's 29,000 fewer smokers since 1999, credited largely to programs funded by the master settlement agreement between states and big tobacco companies, the report says.

"What this shows is if you have a sustainable program and you continue with that program . . . you can see results," said Beverly May, regional advocacy director for the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. "I think that we have every reason to be proud."

The state's current adult smoking rate — 10.5 percent — is the lowest since 1984, when the health department began tracking smoking rates, according to the 2005 Tobacco Prevention and Control in Utah annual report.

Programs highlighted in this week's report include the TRUTH advertising campaign, Utah Tobacco Quit Line and Utah QuitNet, as well as school and community-based initiatives.

The study also notes that child and adolescent exposure to secondhand smoke at home has declined by 44 percent since 2001, meaning 18,000 fewer children are at risk for health problems related to secondhand smoke. Also, the smoking rate for high school students decreased by 39 percent since 1999, according to the report.

Although the numbers are impressive, tobacco use continues to be a problem in Utah, cautioned Lena Dibble of the department's Tobacco Prevention and Control program.

"We still know that a lot of people in Utah use tobacco, we still know that it's costing the state a lot of money. So it's not over yet," Dibble said.

May agreed. "I'm not going to say we've beat the battle here in Utah, because I don't think we have."

Nearly 200,000 Utahns currently smoke, and tobacco use costs the state $530 million each year from smoking-related medical and productivity costs, according to the report. Additionally, 1,100 Utahns die each year from tobacco use.

Utah receives between $30 million and $35 million annually from the master settlement agreement, and about $4 million of that goes to the state Department of Health for the prevention and control programs evaluated in this week's report. The department gets another $3 million from cigarette taxes as well as about $2 million in matching federal funds.

"We don't have an incredibly highly funded program, which we're not complaining about. We do a lot with the money we have," Dibble said.

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