ACSH Dispatches Round-Up: Tobacco cessation therapies, cell phone towers, &c. By Elizabeth Wade
ACSH, Apr 04, 2009
April 3, 2009
Congress's Pro-Smoking Bill and Anti-Book Law, plus Radiation Hysteria
Quitting smoking just got harder
A story about a study concluding that smokers who use nicotine replacement therapy are twice as likely to quit for six months than those who were given placebos reminds us of the dire straits we are in with regard to tobacco cessation therapy. What isn't reported until the end of the news story is that only 6.75% of the smokers given the nicotine replacement therapy managed to quit for six months -- and only half of them are expected to remain smoke-free in the future.
"These abysmal quit rates show that our current smoking cessation therapies are almost never effective," says ACSH's Dr. Gilbert Ross. "People who close their eyes to alternative cessation therapies, such as smokeless tobacco as harm reduction, are being ostriches at the expense of the over 40 million addicted smokers in this country -- and who knows how many millions around the world."
Unfortunately, the U.S. took a step in the wrong direction yesterday when the House of Representatives passed the Kennedy-Waxman bill giving the FDA regulatory control of tobacco and defeated Rep. Steven Buyer's (R-IN) harm reduction amendment in a 284-142 vote. Lawmakers expect a tighter vote in the Senate, and ACSH looks forward to offering our science-based perspective to the continuing debate. We wholeheartedly agree with Rep. Buyer when he says, "Effectively giving an FDA stamp of approval on cigarettes will improperly lead people to believe that these products are safe, and they really aren't. We want to move people from smoking down the continuum of risk to eventually quitting."
The current battle over the e-cigarette illustrates the problems with our country's approach to tobacco policy. The e-cigarette delivers a hit of nicotine vapor when a person "smokes" it, so smokers who are trying to quit can satisfy their craving without inhaling the harmful products of combustion produced by cigarettes. But because the FDA has yet to approve the e-cigarette as a nicotine-delivery device, this new technology could be banned until it undergoes the approval process. "You can't blame the FDA for enforcing the law, but we have bad laws about tobacco that lead to bad public policy outcomes," says ACSH's Jeff Stier.
Attack of the cell phone towers!
A group of Staten Island parents and lawmakers are up in arms about the possibility of cell phone towers sending low-level radiation into a nearby school. "When they traced the source of radiation, which was above average but not dangerous, they found that it wasn't connected to the cell phone towers at all," Dr. Ross remarks. "But they are still trying to get them removed!"
Dr. Whelan adds, "When people believe scares like this they become totally irrational. When they really believe that these towers are emitting dangerous levels of radiation, how do you convince them otherwise?"
Dr. Ross jokes, "The only way to appease them seems to be getting all the students at this school metal helmets." ACSH debunked the wrongheaded notion that cell phones cause brain cancer in our Top 10 Unfounded Health Scares of 2008. For more information, see our publication The Health Effects of Low-Level Radiation.
CPSIA remains intact, Prop 65 grows even more ridiculous
Unfortunately, the Senate rejected Senator Jim DeMint's (R-SC) amendment to the stimulus bill that would have reformed the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA). "The Senate failed to take a breath of fresh air," Stier says. As we have written before, the CPSIA places an impossible burden on many small businesses by banning certain types of phthalates and requiring that every children's product be tested for minuscule levels of lead. If a business can't afford the expensive testing, it must throw out the products -- even all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) and children's books!
As summarized so succinctly in today's Wall Street Journal editorial, "With one stroke of the regulatory pen, an estimated $100 million of inventory can't be sold, and the industry loss may reach $1 billion."
In California, we see the results of another absurdly stringent "public health" measure, Proposition 65, which requires warnings to accompany any product that contains "toxic chemicals." To avoid lawsuits, businesses in the state have taken to posting frivolous "warning signs" about products that do not pose any danger to consumers' health.
"Prop 65 is not based on health or science, but rather perceptions and politics," Dr. Ross says. For more on the consequences of the misguided law, check out Stier's op-ed "Perils of Global Warnings" from the Washington Times.
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