President Issues New Restrictions on Tobacco Advertising, Sales to Minors

Publication
Article
Oncology NEWS InternationalOncology NEWS International Vol 5 No 10
Volume 5
Issue 10

WASHINGTON--President Clinton has announced new restrictions on tobacco advertising and sales intended to cut teenage smoking in half over the next 7 years.

WASHINGTON--President Clinton has announced new restrictions ontobacco advertising and sales intended to cut teenage smokingin half over the next 7 years.

The rules, based on the FDA's new classification of tobacco productsas nicotine delivery devices, will prohibit giving out free tobaccosamples or using billboards at sports events for tobacco advertising,and will restrict the use of cigarette vending machines to adultfacilities where children are not allowed. The rules will alsoabolish cigarette advertisements in magazines that tend to beread by teenagers. The regulations will be phased in over a periodof 1 to 2 years, to allow time for compliance.

The day after President Clinton made his announcement, a 662-pagedocument explaining the basis for the FDA's assertion of jurisdictionover cigarettes and smokeless tobacco under the Federal Food,Drug, and Cosmetic Act was published in the Federal Register (vol.61, no. 168, annex).

The NCI issued a press release applauding the regulations. "Ifa new medicine promised to reduce cancer deaths by a third, we,as a nation, would rush to bring that therapy to the market,"the NCI said. "The President wants to do just that, but asa preventive measure."

Recent Videos
Retrospective and real-world registry studies may be necessary to guide clinical decision-making for rarer lymphomas with insufficient prospective data.
Extravasation results in exposing healthy tissue to radiation, which can be highly dosed depending on the isotope used for treatment.
4 experts in this video
2 experts in this video
2 experts in this video
4 experts in this video
Ongoing studies seek to evaluate immunotherapy in earlier lines of therapy for patients with early-stage Hodgkin lymphoma.
Strict inclusion criteria may disproportionately exclude racial minority populations from participating in breast cancer trials.
Related Content