Washington 1997/06/20 - The American Cancer Society (ACS) has put
into place a three-component process for evaluating the tobacco
settlement
proposal issued today by 40 states' Attorneys General and the
tobacco
industry. "We continue to be encoraged by the public health
concepts that
appear to be contained in the settlement," said John R.
Seffrin, American
Cancer Society CEO. "However, we will not take a final position
until we
complete an extensive review of all its elements."
The ACS evaluation process, the preliminary results of which
should be
ready for public release in a timely fashion, includes (1) a
review by
ACS's own staff and volunteer executive leadership; (2) a
specially-convened panel of outside legal, economic and health
policy
experts; and (3) participation in the evaluation process by the
recently-
appointed Advisory Committee on Tobacco Policy and Public
Health, which is
an independent panel chaired jointly by former FDA commissioner
David
Kessler and former Surgeon General C. Evertt Koop. Seffrin is a
member of
this panel. "We urge the entire health community to participate
in the
evaluation of this settlement," Seffrin said.
"We believe it is part of our obligation as public advocates for
health
that we do all in our power to ensure that this settlement
accomplishes
extraordinary protection of our kids' health," Seffrin said.
"We want a
settlement that furthers our mission in bringing cancer under
control as a
major health problem. Every day in this country, 3,000 kids
start smoking
for the first time. One element of the settlement outlines
goals the
tobacco industry would have to meet for the reduction of these
youth
smoking rates. We have the opportunity to save one million
lives with the
smoking education and prevention efforts set out in this
settlement. --
more American lives than have been lost in all the country's wars
combined."
"The settlement proposal now goes to Congress and the President
for
ratification," Seffrin said. "We intend to monitor this
process very
closely, and we will work actively to ensure the elements
affecting public
health are sustained and supported, and this industry
controlled."
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