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Archive for August, 2007

Altria May Spin Off International Cigarette Business

Posted on August 28th, 2007 by admin
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News Summary

Philip Morris parent Altria Group is considering a plan to spin off its Philip Morris International business while retaining control of Philip Morris USA. The New York Times reported Aug. 25 that the company views the move as a way to expand its tobacco business more aggressively worldwide without being fettered by tough U.S. regulations and potential litigation. “This is something that has been in the works for years,” said Bonnie Herzog, a tobacco industry analyst at Citigroup. “To me, it’s a done deal.” “It allows Philip Morris International to become much more free to pursue growth opportunities,” added Herzog.  

N.C. Passes ‘Fire-Safe’ Cigarette Law

Posted on August 28th, 2007 by admin
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News Summary

Traditional tobacco state North Carolina has passed a law requiring tobacco firms to sell only “fire-safe” versions of their cigarettes by 2010, WITN-TV reported Aug. 24. House Bill 1785, signed into law by Gov. Mike Easley, requires that self-extinguishing cigarettes be sold in the state. “Cigarettes are the leading cause of deaths from fires in North Carolina,” said Easley. “By making the change to self-extinguishing cigarettes, it is estimated that as many as 50 fire-related deaths in our state could be prevented each year.” Companies that violate the law could be fined $100,000, while retailers could pay up to $25,000 in fines.

Hello world!

Posted on August 24th, 2007 by admin
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Welcome to WordPress. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

Workaholics More Likely to Be Smokers

Posted on August 24th, 2007 by admin
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Men who work more than 50 hours weekly smoke at twice the rate of those who work normal full-time hours, Science Daily reported Aug. 23. Researchers at the University of Melbourne in Australia also found that those who characterized their work as demanding and had a low level of control over their jobs also were more likely to smoke. Among female workers, smoking risk was tied primarily to having a physically demanding job. “Workplace health promotion programs that encourage employees to give up smoking without reducing job stress would be missing an important opportunity to promote healthy working conditions as well as healthy behaviors,” noted Todd Harper, CEO of the Victorian Health Promotion Foundation. The study was published in the August 2007 issue of the American Journal of Industrial Medicine. Reference:
Radi, S., Ostry, A., LaMontagne, A.D. (2007) Job stress and other working conditions: Relationships with smoking behaviors in a representative sample of working Australians. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 50(8): 584-596.   This article summarizes a mainstream media report of research published in a scientific journal. It is not an original analysis of the source material, which is cited in the reference above.

High Court Again Rejects Illinois Tobacco Liability Case

Posted on August 24th, 2007 by admin
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News Summary

A class-action lawsuit against Philip Morris USA has been rejected by the Illinois Supreme Court for a second time, putting the future of the $10.1-billion case in serious doubt, the Belleville News-Democrat reported Aug. 23. In 2003, a circuit court judge awarded a huge judgment against the tobacco company in a class-action lawsuit centered on claims that Philip Morris misled consumers into believing that “light” cigarettes were less harmful than regular ones. In 2005, the Illinois Supreme Court threw the award out on appeal, saying that the U.S. Federal Trade Commission had allowed the used of the term “light.” The plaintiffs’ appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court failed, but they again appealed to the state Supreme Court when a brief in an unrelated case revealed that the FTC never regulated the use of the term “light.” But this week the Illinois high court ruled against another appeal in the case. The plaintiffs could still file a motion arguing that new evidence has come to light in the form of the FTC brief, but it’s not certain if that will happen.

10th Anniversary of Tobacco Settlement Marked

Posted on August 23rd, 2007 by admin
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News Summary

Florida officials recently marked the 10th anniversary of Florida’s landmark settlement with the tobacco industry, which helped spark similar deals across the U.S., the Fort Myers News-Press reported Aug. 21. “It’s hard to believe it’s been 10 years since the epic battle my father and [former Attorney] General [Bob] Butterworth fought,” said Bud Chiles, former Gov. Lawton Chiles son. Butterworth said Chiles had three goals in pressing for the settlement: restricting advertising aimed at children, truth in advertising about the addictiveness and health consequences of smoking, and compensation for the state’s health costs resulting from smoking. In Florida, money from the settlement helped fund a lauded smoking prevention campaign credited with sharply curtailing youth smoking.

Smoking Bans Cut Smoking Rates, Canadian Study Finds

Posted on August 23rd, 2007 by admin
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Canadian researchers say that smokers who face smoking bans at home or at work are significantly more likely to quit than those who face no restrictions, UPI reported Aug. 21. Statistics Canada researchers analyzed data from the Canadian Tobacco Use Monitoring Survey and the National Population Health Survey and found that 20 percent of smokers living in homes that became “smoke-free” had quit two years later, compared to 13 percent of smokers who lived in homes where smoking was permitted. Also, 27 percent of smokers who were barred from smoking at work had quit, compared to 13 percent of those who did not work in smoke-free workplaces. The study was published in the journal Health Reports.

Many Older Americans Have Active Sex Lives (HealthDay)

Posted on August 23rd, 2007 by admin
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August 22, 2007 08:40:41 PM PST
By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, Aug. 22 (HealthDay News) — Many older Americans aren’t letting age slow down their sex lives, a new study shows.

The first comprehensive national survey of the sexual attitudes, behaviors and problems of U.S. adults age 57 and older finds many are having sex often. In fact, the frequency of sexual activity dropped only slightly between the late 50s up to the early 70s.

And more than half of those in the oldest age group — 75 to 85 — who were sexually active reported having sex at least two to three times per month, and 23 percent reported having sex at least once a week.

“This gives us, for the first time, the most comprehensive and nationally representative data on sexuality for men and women and makes a particular contribution with regard to knowledge of older women’s sexuality,” study lead author Dr. Stacy Tesser Lindau, assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology and of medicine-geriatrics at the University of Chicago, said at a Monday teleconference.

Lindau is lead researcher on the study, which is published in the Aug. 23 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

“This is of extreme importance and a landmark study that hopefully will get the medical community and society focused on this in a less taboo way. It’s a great start,” said Dr. Barbara Paris, director of geriatrics at Mai monides Medical Center in New York City. “For most people, it’s a shock to hear that people are having sex in their 70s,” she said.

“This is a premier study,” added Marcia G. Ory, professor of social and behavioral health and director of the Aging and Health Promotion Program at Texas A&M Health Science Center School of Rural Public Health. “It debunks some myths that sex and old age don’t go together, and it places this in the context of health and health problems.”

According to the study authors, little is known about sexuality among older people in the United States, despite this group being the fastest growing segment of the population.

“I’m a gynecologist, and, for me, there was a tremendous void of information to be able to provide people the information they needed to make health care decisions and to be prepared for changes,” Lindau said. “With the right information, people might be able to cope better.”

For this study, the University of Chicago’s National Social Life, Health and Aging Project (NSHAP) researchers interviewed 3,005 U.S. adults (1,550 women and 1,455 men), aged 57 to 85 in their homes.

Three-quarters of those approached agreed to participate and were remarkably forthcoming about their sex lives.

Researchers found that the prevalence of sexual activity did decline with age, with 73 percent of respondents aged 57 to 64 reporting sexual activity, 53 percent among those aged 65 to 74 and 26 percent among those aged 75 to 85.

Women were less likely to be sexually active than men in age groups. More than three-quarters (78 percent) of men aged 75 to 85 had a spouse or other intimate relationship, only 40 percent of women in that age group had a partner.

Women were also more likely to rate sex as “not at all important” (35 percent versus 13 percent of men).

“There do seem some gender disparities,” Lindau said. “Men overall are more likely to have partners in later life and are more likely to be sexually active with their partners.”

“Older ages really are different for men and women,” added Linda Waite, senior author of the paper and the Lucy Flower Professor in Urban Sociology at the University of Chicago. “Men tend to be married until they die, and women tend to spend their final years as widows.” In addition, men tend to have younger partners and women older partners, which translates into fewer opportunities for sexual intimacy for women.

About half of both men and women who were sexually active reported sexual problems. The most prevalent among women were low desire (experienced by 43 percent of respondents), vaginal dryness (39 percent) and inability to climax (34 percent). The most common problem reported by men was erectile dysfunction (37 percent).

Fourteen percent of all men reported using medication or supplements to help improve sexual function. “That was a high number,” Lindau said.

Health more than age tended to affect people’s sex lives; men and women who said their health was poor were less likely to be sexually active.

“The linkage with sexual health is closer to other health issues and is not so tied directly to aging per se,” said Edward Laumann, co-author of the study and the George Herbert Mead Distinguished Service Professor in Sociology at the University of Chicago. “Sexual health, when it begins to deteriorate, may be an important warning sign, because it may be an early warning sign of more profound health problems.” Lindau was co-director of the 1992 National Health and Social Life Survey which surveyed persons aged 18 to 59.

Despite difficulties, only 38 percent of men and 22 percent of women reported having discussed sexual health with a doctor since the age of 50.

Many people found ways to stay sexually active, even if their overall health was declining. This included oral sex (the prevalence being about 50 percent among those under 75) and masturbation (more than half of men and 25 percent of women said they masturbated, regardless of whether they had a partner).

That being said, vaginal intercourse was often predominant.

“The vast majority said that vaginal intercourse is always part of sexual behavior; that declines slightly as people age, with more cuddling and kissing and snuggling as the primary activity,” Waite said.

The researchers also collected physiological specimens such as saliva and vaginal swabs, the results of which will appear in follow-up studies. The samples will provide information on hormone levels, prevalence of chronic diseases such as diabetes and the frequency of human papillomavirus (HPV), which is sexually transmitted.

While this research will pave the way for far more information in the future, for the present, it may help open the doors of communication.

“For physicians, it really gives us a wake up call that you should be asking about sexual function,” said Dr. Laurie Jacobs, chief of geriatric medicine at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City.

For more on aging and sex, head to .

County snuffs out proposed smoking ban

Posted on August 23rd, 2007 by admin
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County snuffs out proposed smoking ban

Good for this county in Missouri! They are standing up to the Health Facists who are trying to ram “healthy” legislation down our throats.

Ironwood,MI — The Ontonagon County Board of Commissioners rejected an anti-smoking ordinance Tuesday against the wishes of the health department.

Ontonagon became the first county in the Western Upper Peninsula District Health Department to reject the clean indoor air regulation. A health department had urged the commissioners to table any action until a public survey could be conducted.

Houghton, Baraga and Gogebic counties have all approved the regulation, but all the counties in the health department district must consent to it before the ordinance can take effect. The ordinance would prohibit smoking indoors at all worksites and public places, with the exception of bars, restaurants and tribal properties.

Former commissioner Al Slye questioned the cost of enforcing the ban with mandated inspections.

“Who enforces the ordinance?” Slye asked. “In my opinion, the (health department) has an ulterior motive, a hidden agenda, and more of this kind of ordinance will come down the line.”

Health department director Guy St. Germain asked the board to postpone action on the ordinance until a survey of county residents could be conducted by an impartial body.

“I am concerned that we not rush into this because everything we read shows that a majority of citizens support the ordinance,” St. Germain said.

He said a majority of states have already passed such an act.

Commissioner Skip Schulz told St. Germain that the health department didn’t ask for a survey from the Village of Ontonagon before the village council voted on the issue, because he already knew the council supported the ordinance.

“You do not have support here, so you want to put it off,” Schulz said.

Schulz also said that in the three months since the county board held a public hearing on the issue, there has been no outcry from the public to support more laws or such a ban.

The board agreed to vote and then defeated the proposal, saying it would be preferable for businesses to voluntarily take action. The motion also suggested it was the health department’s responsibility to convince businesses to voluntarily support a ban.

Commissioner John Pelkola cast the lone dissenting vote.

Marlboro-Branded Smokeless Tobacco Coming

Posted on August 22nd, 2007 by admin
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News Summary

A new moist-snuff product to be released this fall by Philip Morris will bear the Marlboro name and sell for about $3 per can, the Associated Press reported Aug. 21. The Marlboro-branded smokeless tobacco will come in long- and fine-cut varieties and be rolled out in the Atlanta area. “This new type of moist snuff product offering kind of builds on that premium tobacco experience that Marlboro represents,” said Philip Morris USA spokesman David Sutton. Analysts say that the company will “fully cement” its place in the smokeless-tobacco market by leveraging its most famous brand. “We anticipate that PM USA will be able to attract the majority of smokers that will cross over into the smokeless market, as well as attract existing moist users,” said Citibank tobacco industry analyst Bonnie Herzog.