среда, 25 июля 2012 г.

Regents vote in favor of tobacco ban on Ohio campuses


Ohio higher education officials voted unanimously Monday to urge the state’s public campuses to ban all sales and use of tobacco products, including smoking outdoors. The Ohio Board of Regents’ resolution comes after a review showed such policies bring health benefits to both smokers and nonsmokers and cut costs for education institutions, said Chairman James Tuschman. Tuschman said Ohio can set an example, since it often serves as a test market for new tobacco products aimed at young people. “It is the right thing to do,” he said. The Regents’ recommendation extends to all Ohio’s campuses, including Ohio State, one of the nation’s largest universities. Currently, OSU bans only indoor smoking and some outdoor smoking around its health facilities.

The university said Monday it will review the issue. At least seven public colleges or universities in Ohio currently have tobacco bans, including Miami University, Hocking College, and the health science campus of the University of Toledo. Regent Patricia Ackerman said she backed the resolution “as someone who smoked my first cigarette at age 14, as someone who went to college and viewed as a true act of liberation making that first official act of freedom purchasing a pack of cigarettes.” Statistics show Ackerman was not alone: 40 percent of smokers either begin or become regular smokers starting in college. The board is led by Chancellor Jim Petro, who picked up the smoking habit on campus.

 “I began smoking in college and continued to smoke for 40 years. It has adversely affected my health,” said Petro who was diagnosed in 2009 with laryngeal cancer that could have been caused by smoking. He is cancer-free now. “By approving this resolution and recommending that policies be implemented on our campuses, the Board of Regents can have a significant and positive effect on a student’s life.” Ohio Health Director Ted Wymyslo said reaching young people is critical. Ohio, like many states, has cut funding to his smoking prevention programs amid several years of tight budgets.

 “It’s particularly important to get to that younger age and stop that habit that we’ve seen,” he said. “That means we have to have a culture change.” The state Health Department has prepared model policies and tips to help colleges and universities implement tobacco-free policies — but the decision will ultimately be up to each institution’s board of trustees. Such bans can include outdoor smoking, smoking in vehicles, use of chewing tobacco and candy-style products on campus, and prohibitions against tobacco sales and advertising. Perhaps half of campuses nationwide have enacted or are considering going tobacco free, sometimes over the objections of student smokers, staff and faculty.

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