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College students support smoking restrictions
Survey finds even smokers prefer
smoke-free dorms, other tobacco control efforts
BOSTON - September 16, 2003 - U.S. college students express
strong support for tobacco control policies that aim to reduce cigarette
smoking on college campuses, according to a new survey by researchers
from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Harvard School of
Public Health (HSPH). As reported in the September 2003 issue of
the journal Tobacco Control, most of the students surveyed
favored policies ranging from banning smoking in all dormitories
and other campus buildings to prohibiting the sale or advertising
of tobacco products on campus. Support for all of these policies
was stronger among nonsmokers, but even smokers favored making all
college buildings smoke-free and prohibiting tobacco company advertising
and sponsorship of campus events.
"Smoking among college students increased dramatically over
the last decade, and we know that the tobacco industry is marketing
its products aggressively to young adults," said Nancy Rigotti,
MD, director of the MGH Tobacco Research and Treatment Center, the
paper's lead author. In response to this problem, the American College
Health Association and the American Cancer Society have each produced
recommended tobacco control policies for U.S. colleges. On some
campuses, however, college administrators have been reluctant to
adopt these restrictions out of concern about student opposition.
Until this study, there was no information about what students actually
thought of the recommendations.
To elicit students' opinions on tobacco control policies, MGH researchers
joined forces with investigators from the HSPH College Alcohol Study,
an ongoing survey of students at four-year colleges across the U.S.
The 2001 College Alcohol Study survey of almost 11,000 students
at 119 U.S. colleges included questions about tobacco use and students'
opinions about proposed tobacco control policies.
More than three-quarters of responding students supported banning
smoking in all campus buildings, including dormitories and dining
halls. Over half the students who currently lived in dormitories
where smoking was permitted expressed a preference for smoke-free
housing. More than 70 percent of respondents supported prohibiting
on-campus tobacco industry marketing or sponsorship of campus social
events; 60 percent supported a ban on tobacco sales, and 51 percent
approved a smoking ban in on-campus bars.
Although approval of tobacco control measures was lower among smokers,
five of the seven proposed policies - including smoke-free dorms
and dining halls and bans on tobacco ads and sponsorship - received
overall support from smokers. Opposition to the proposed policies
was found primarily among the heaviest smokers.
"Fewer than 10 percent of college students smoke as many as
10 cigarettes every day, and this is where most opposition lies,"
says Rigotti, an associate professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical
School. "In fact, almost 40 percent of college students who
smoke don't smoke every day, and these smokers support campus tobacco
control policies." Smokers who reported planning to quit in
the coming month also showed stronger support for tobacco control
policies.
"College students are the youngest legal group for the tobacco
industry to target, and as a consequence they need protection,"
says Henry Wechsler, PhD, director of the HSPH College Alcohol Study
and a co-author of the current study. "These results give us
hope that efforts to reduce or eliminate cigarettes from college
campuses can be successful."
"Being able to say that the overwhelming majority of college
students want smoke-free environments is a powerful tool. Our findings
should reassure college administrators considering banning smoking
in dormitories and other actions," Rigotti says. "These
policies can help students resist tobacco companies' messages and
prepare them for the wider world, where smoke-free environments
have become the norm in workplaces, restaurants and even bars."
In addition to Rigotti and Wechsler, the report's co-authors are
Susan Regan, PhD, and Susan Moran MD, MSCE, of the MGH Tobacco Research
and Treatment Center. The study was supported by the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation, the Flight Attendant Medical Research Institute
and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
Massachusetts General Hospital, established in 1811, is the original
and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The MGH
conducts the largest hospital-based research program in the United
States, with an annual research budget of more than $350 million
and major research centers in AIDS, cardiovascular research, cancer,
cutaneous biology, medical imaging, neurodegenerative disorders,
transplantation biology and photomedicine. In 1994, the MGH joined
with Brigham and Women's Hospital to form Partners HealthCare System,
an integrated health care delivery system comprising the two academic
medical centers, specialty and community hospitals, a network of
physician groups and nonacute and home health services.
Media Contact: Sue
McGreevey, MGH Public Affairs
Physician Referral Service: 1-800-388-4644
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