News (Media Awareness Project) - US NYT: Disputed Statistics Fuel Politics in Youth Smoking |
Title: | US NYT: Disputed Statistics Fuel Politics in Youth Smoking |
Published On: | 1998-05-20 |
Source: | New York Times (NY) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-07 09:54:10 |
DISPUTED STATISTICS FUEL POLITICS IN YOUTH SMOKING
It is the mantra of the nation's opponents of smoking: that sweeping
changes in the way cigarettes are marketed and sold over the next decade
will stop thousands of teen-agers each day from starting the habit and
spare a million youngsters from untimely deaths.
President Clinton recently warned, for example, that one million people
would die prematurely if Congress did not pass tobacco legislation this
year. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and the author of a $516 billion tobacco
bill, has urged lawmakers to stop "3,000 kids a day from starting this
life-threatening addiction."
But with the Senate beginning debate on Monday on tobacco legislation, many
experts warn that such predictions are little more than wild estimates that
are raising what may be unreasonable expectations for change in youth
smoking rates.
The assertion that one million lives would be saved, for example, comes
from a statement by the American Cancer Society last year that a 60 percent
decrease in youth smoking in coming years could reduce early deaths from
diseases like lung cancer by a million. But critics say the 60 percent
figure was merely a target of anti-smoking advocates, with no analysis to
back it up.
Social issues often spark unfounded claims cloaked in the reason of
science. But the debate over smoking, politically packaged around the
emotional subject of the health of children, is charged with hyperbole,
some experts say. Politicians and policy makers have tossed out dozens of
estimates about the impact of various strategies on youth smoking rates,
figures that turn out to be based on projections rather than fact.
"I think this whole business of trying to prevent kids from smoking being
the impetus behind legislation is great politics," said Richard Kluger, the
author of "Ashes to Ashes" (Knopf, 1996), a history of America's battle
over smoking and health. "But it is nonsense in terms of anything that you
can put numbers next to."
Everyone in the tobacco debate agrees that reducing youth smoking would
have major benefits because nearly all long-term smokers start as
teen-agers. But only a few studies have tried to analyze how steps like
price increases and bans on advertising affect youth smoking. And those
have often produced contradictory results.
Consider the issue of cigarette pricing. In recent congressional testimony,
Lawrence Summers, the deputy Treasury secretary, cited studies saying that
every 10 percent increase in the price of a pack of cigarettes would
produce up to a 7 percent reduction in the number of children who smoke.
Those studies argue that such a drop would occur because children are far
more sensitive to price increases than adults.
"The best way to combat youth smoking is to raise the price," Summers said.
But a recent study by researchers at Cornell University came to a far
different conclusion, including a finding that the types of studies cited
by Summers may be based on a faulty assumption.
Donald Kenkel, an associate professor of policy analysis and management at
Cornell, said that earlier studies tried to draw national patterns by
correlating youth smoking rates and cigarette prices in various states at a
given time.
But in the Cornell study, which looked at youth smoking rates and cigarette
prices over a period of years, researchers found that price had little
effect. For example, the study found that states that increased tobacco
taxes did not have significantly fewer children who started smoking
compared with states that raised taxes at a slower rate or not at all.
Kenkel added that he had no idea how the price increase being considered by
Congress -- $1.10 per pack or more -- would affect youth smoking rates
because the price of cigarettes, now an average of $2 a pack, has never
jumped so much in the United States. And he added that there were so few
studies on youth smoking rates and price that any estimate was a guess.
"It is very difficult to do good policy analysis when the research basis is
as thin and variable as this," Kenkel said.
Jonathan Gruber, a Treasury Department official, said that the Cornell
study had its own methodological flaws and that the earlier findings about
prices supported the department's position. He also pointed out that Canada
doubled cigarette prices from 1981 to 1991 and saw youth smoking rates fall
by half.
Under the tobacco legislation being considered in the United States,
cigarette prices would increase by about 50 percent. And while advocates of
the legislation say that the increase would reduce youth smoking by 30
percent over the next decade, they say that an additional 30 percent
reduction would come through companion measures like advertising
restrictions and increased penalties for store owners who sold cigarettes
to underage smokers and for youngsters who bought them.
The claim that comprehensive tobacco legislation would reduce youth smoking
by 60 percent over the next decade is perhaps the most frequently cited
number by advocates of such bills. But that figure first emerged last year
in a different context and quickly came under attack.
The American Cancer Society, soon after the settlement plan was reached in
June between the tobacco industry and 40 state attorneys general, said that
one goal of that agreement -- a 60 percent decline in youth smoking rates
over the next decade -- would spare one million children from early deaths
from smoking-related diseases. The plan, which recently collapsed, would
have raised cigarette prices by about 62 cents over a decade and banned
certain types of tobacco advertising and promotional campaigns.
But some tobacco opponents soon found fault with the cancer society's
estimates. For one, those critics pointed out that the 60 percent figure
represented only a target, and that penalties would be imposed on tobacco
companies if it were not reached. And the cancer society, they added, had
not performed any analysis of the June deal to determine whether it could
produce a 60 percent decline in youth smoking.
"They basically made up the number and I think it was totally irresponsible
of them," said Dr. Stanton Glantz, a professor of medicine at the
University of California at San Francisco. "It is like assuming that by
snapping our fingers we could make breast cancer go away."
In a letter to Dr. Glantz, Dr. Michael Thun, the cancer society's vice
president for epidemiology and surveillance research, acknowledged that the
group's statement was based on an "if-then" projection, rather than an
analysis of whether the proposal's programs would accomplish that goal.
"The way the number was derived has nothing to do with what will
effectively get us there," Dr. Thun said in a recent interview.
The new 60 percent estimate is based on a different formulation. But it,
like the cancer society statistic, also coincides with a target for
reducing youth smoking that would result in industry penalties if not
reached. And along with questioning the impact of price on reaching such a
goal, experts are at odds over whether advertising bans and sales
restrictions would produce the projected 30 percent drop in youth smoking.
In California, for example, youth smoking began to decline in the early
1990's, soon after the state began one of the most aggressive anti-smoking
campaigns in the country. But it has begun to rise again in recent years.
Dr. John Pierce, a professor of cancer prevention at the University of
California at San Diego, said he thought that reversal might reflect the
ability of cigarette makers to alter their promotional strategies to keep
tobacco attractive to teen-agers even as regulators try to block them.
For their part, cigarette makers, whose internal documents suggest a
significant impact on youth smoking from price increases, appear happy to
play both sides of the statistical fence.
Last year, they estimated that the price increase in the June plan would
cause sales to drop by nearly 43 percent among all smokers over a decade.
But now that Congress is considering raising prices by twice that much,
producers have turned around and said that higher prices would undermine,
rather than help, efforts to reduce youth smoking.
Steven Duchesne, an industry spokesman, said tobacco companies thought that
high cigarette prices would encourage those in the black market to target
teen-agers.
"Smugglers would sell cigarettes out of the back of trucks without checking
ID's," Mr. Duchesne said.
Experts agree that unless significant changes are made in areas like price
and advertising, youth smoking rates will not decline. But unlike
politicians, many of them are unwilling to make predictions. Instead, they
say that the passage of tobacco legislation would guarantee only one thing:
the start of a vast social experiment whose outcome is by no means clear.
Copyright 1998 The New York Times Company
Checked-by: jwjohnson@netmagic.net (Joel W. Johnson)
It is the mantra of the nation's opponents of smoking: that sweeping
changes in the way cigarettes are marketed and sold over the next decade
will stop thousands of teen-agers each day from starting the habit and
spare a million youngsters from untimely deaths.
President Clinton recently warned, for example, that one million people
would die prematurely if Congress did not pass tobacco legislation this
year. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and the author of a $516 billion tobacco
bill, has urged lawmakers to stop "3,000 kids a day from starting this
life-threatening addiction."
But with the Senate beginning debate on Monday on tobacco legislation, many
experts warn that such predictions are little more than wild estimates that
are raising what may be unreasonable expectations for change in youth
smoking rates.
The assertion that one million lives would be saved, for example, comes
from a statement by the American Cancer Society last year that a 60 percent
decrease in youth smoking in coming years could reduce early deaths from
diseases like lung cancer by a million. But critics say the 60 percent
figure was merely a target of anti-smoking advocates, with no analysis to
back it up.
Social issues often spark unfounded claims cloaked in the reason of
science. But the debate over smoking, politically packaged around the
emotional subject of the health of children, is charged with hyperbole,
some experts say. Politicians and policy makers have tossed out dozens of
estimates about the impact of various strategies on youth smoking rates,
figures that turn out to be based on projections rather than fact.
"I think this whole business of trying to prevent kids from smoking being
the impetus behind legislation is great politics," said Richard Kluger, the
author of "Ashes to Ashes" (Knopf, 1996), a history of America's battle
over smoking and health. "But it is nonsense in terms of anything that you
can put numbers next to."
Everyone in the tobacco debate agrees that reducing youth smoking would
have major benefits because nearly all long-term smokers start as
teen-agers. But only a few studies have tried to analyze how steps like
price increases and bans on advertising affect youth smoking. And those
have often produced contradictory results.
Consider the issue of cigarette pricing. In recent congressional testimony,
Lawrence Summers, the deputy Treasury secretary, cited studies saying that
every 10 percent increase in the price of a pack of cigarettes would
produce up to a 7 percent reduction in the number of children who smoke.
Those studies argue that such a drop would occur because children are far
more sensitive to price increases than adults.
"The best way to combat youth smoking is to raise the price," Summers said.
But a recent study by researchers at Cornell University came to a far
different conclusion, including a finding that the types of studies cited
by Summers may be based on a faulty assumption.
Donald Kenkel, an associate professor of policy analysis and management at
Cornell, said that earlier studies tried to draw national patterns by
correlating youth smoking rates and cigarette prices in various states at a
given time.
But in the Cornell study, which looked at youth smoking rates and cigarette
prices over a period of years, researchers found that price had little
effect. For example, the study found that states that increased tobacco
taxes did not have significantly fewer children who started smoking
compared with states that raised taxes at a slower rate or not at all.
Kenkel added that he had no idea how the price increase being considered by
Congress -- $1.10 per pack or more -- would affect youth smoking rates
because the price of cigarettes, now an average of $2 a pack, has never
jumped so much in the United States. And he added that there were so few
studies on youth smoking rates and price that any estimate was a guess.
"It is very difficult to do good policy analysis when the research basis is
as thin and variable as this," Kenkel said.
Jonathan Gruber, a Treasury Department official, said that the Cornell
study had its own methodological flaws and that the earlier findings about
prices supported the department's position. He also pointed out that Canada
doubled cigarette prices from 1981 to 1991 and saw youth smoking rates fall
by half.
Under the tobacco legislation being considered in the United States,
cigarette prices would increase by about 50 percent. And while advocates of
the legislation say that the increase would reduce youth smoking by 30
percent over the next decade, they say that an additional 30 percent
reduction would come through companion measures like advertising
restrictions and increased penalties for store owners who sold cigarettes
to underage smokers and for youngsters who bought them.
The claim that comprehensive tobacco legislation would reduce youth smoking
by 60 percent over the next decade is perhaps the most frequently cited
number by advocates of such bills. But that figure first emerged last year
in a different context and quickly came under attack.
The American Cancer Society, soon after the settlement plan was reached in
June between the tobacco industry and 40 state attorneys general, said that
one goal of that agreement -- a 60 percent decline in youth smoking rates
over the next decade -- would spare one million children from early deaths
from smoking-related diseases. The plan, which recently collapsed, would
have raised cigarette prices by about 62 cents over a decade and banned
certain types of tobacco advertising and promotional campaigns.
But some tobacco opponents soon found fault with the cancer society's
estimates. For one, those critics pointed out that the 60 percent figure
represented only a target, and that penalties would be imposed on tobacco
companies if it were not reached. And the cancer society, they added, had
not performed any analysis of the June deal to determine whether it could
produce a 60 percent decline in youth smoking.
"They basically made up the number and I think it was totally irresponsible
of them," said Dr. Stanton Glantz, a professor of medicine at the
University of California at San Francisco. "It is like assuming that by
snapping our fingers we could make breast cancer go away."
In a letter to Dr. Glantz, Dr. Michael Thun, the cancer society's vice
president for epidemiology and surveillance research, acknowledged that the
group's statement was based on an "if-then" projection, rather than an
analysis of whether the proposal's programs would accomplish that goal.
"The way the number was derived has nothing to do with what will
effectively get us there," Dr. Thun said in a recent interview.
The new 60 percent estimate is based on a different formulation. But it,
like the cancer society statistic, also coincides with a target for
reducing youth smoking that would result in industry penalties if not
reached. And along with questioning the impact of price on reaching such a
goal, experts are at odds over whether advertising bans and sales
restrictions would produce the projected 30 percent drop in youth smoking.
In California, for example, youth smoking began to decline in the early
1990's, soon after the state began one of the most aggressive anti-smoking
campaigns in the country. But it has begun to rise again in recent years.
Dr. John Pierce, a professor of cancer prevention at the University of
California at San Diego, said he thought that reversal might reflect the
ability of cigarette makers to alter their promotional strategies to keep
tobacco attractive to teen-agers even as regulators try to block them.
For their part, cigarette makers, whose internal documents suggest a
significant impact on youth smoking from price increases, appear happy to
play both sides of the statistical fence.
Last year, they estimated that the price increase in the June plan would
cause sales to drop by nearly 43 percent among all smokers over a decade.
But now that Congress is considering raising prices by twice that much,
producers have turned around and said that higher prices would undermine,
rather than help, efforts to reduce youth smoking.
Steven Duchesne, an industry spokesman, said tobacco companies thought that
high cigarette prices would encourage those in the black market to target
teen-agers.
"Smugglers would sell cigarettes out of the back of trucks without checking
ID's," Mr. Duchesne said.
Experts agree that unless significant changes are made in areas like price
and advertising, youth smoking rates will not decline. But unlike
politicians, many of them are unwilling to make predictions. Instead, they
say that the passage of tobacco legislation would guarantee only one thing:
the start of a vast social experiment whose outcome is by no means clear.
Copyright 1998 The New York Times Company
Checked-by: jwjohnson@netmagic.net (Joel W. Johnson)
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