|
1964–Present
1. The Association should continue to educate and inform its membership and the public about the many health hazards attributed to the use of tobacco products, particularly cigarettes, pipes, cigars and smokeless tobacco. (Initially adopted in 1964; revised in 1969, 1978, 1981, and 1988)
2. The Association is opposed to the advertising of cigarettes, pipes, cigar and smokeless tobacco products in both electronic and print media and supports national legislation to this effect. (Initially adopted in 1969; revised in 1988)
3. The Association prohibits smoking at all of its meetings and conferences. (Initially adopted in 1972; revised in 1973, 1976, 1988 and 1992)
4. The Association urges continued research into the adverse health effects of tobacco use. (Adopted in 1986)
5. The Association endorses the mandating of warning labels on tobacco products. (Adopted in 1988)
6. The Association urges its individual members, dental societies, dental schools and related dental organizations to adopt antismoking policies for their offices and meetings, where such policies are not already in place. (Adopted in 1988)
7. The Association urges its members to become fully informed about tobacco cessation intervention techniques to effectively educate their patients to overcome their addiction to tobacco. This information should include education on primary prevention of tobacco use. (Adopted in 1992)
8. The Association supports national and state legislation that would prohibit or limit the ways and places that tobacco advertising and promotion practices can be used, particularly that which appeals to children and teenagers. (Adopted in 1993)
9. The Association supports the enactment and enforcement of laws setting age restrictions for the sale of tobacco products in addition to bans on free sampling. (Initially adopted in 1986; revised in 1993)
10. The Association also supports licensing requirements for sellers of tobacco products and enforcement of bans on the sale of tobacco products through vending machines. (Adopted in 1993)
11. The Association supports the enactment of federal and/or state legislation to significantly increase taxes on tobacco products as a means to discourage the initiation and continuation of tobacco use. (Adopted in 1993)
12. The Association supports the enactment and enforcement of legislation and regulations to reduce the exposure of nonsmoking adults and children to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), with emphasis on facilities and activities that expose the greatest number of people to ETS for the longest periods of time, such as work places, schools, daycare centers, and health care facilities. (Adopted in 1993)
13. The Association urges federal, state and local governments to strengthen and expand their roles in tobacco-use education, prevention, research and cessation efforts. (Adopted in 1993)
14. The Association supports legislation and/or regulation that acknowledges nicotine as an addictive drug and that authorizes the Food and Drug Administration to regulate tobacco products as nicotine delivery devices and/or drugs; and further, urges that such legislation be promptly enacted so that the use of nicotine is restricted. (Initially adopted in 1992, revised in 1995)
15. The American Dental Association urges that state tobacco settlement funds be targeted toward improving health and reducing the morbidity and mortality associated with tobacco-related diseases, especially oral diseases, in collaboration with health-related organizations and agencies. (Adopted in 1999)
16. The American Dental Association urges that state tobacco settlement funds be used to improve access to care for underserved populations by increasing funding to dental programs such as Medicaid and the State Child Health Insurance Program. (Adopted in 1999)
17. The American Dental Association urges that a portion of state tobacco settlement funds be targeted toward tobacco control programs that reduce tobacco use, particularly in children and adolescents. (Adopted in 1999)
18. The American Dental Association continue{s} to assist constituent dental societies in designing strategies to promote the use of state tobacco settlement funds in a manner consistent with Association policy. (Adopted in 1999)
19. National Action Plan for Tobacco Cessation
Resolved, that the American Dental Association
supports the following proposals approved by the federal Interagency
Committee on Smoking and Health in its 2003 national action plan
for tobacco cessation:
1. establish a federally-funded National Tobacco Quitline network;
2. launch an ongoing, extensive paid media
campaign to help Americans quit using tobacco;
3. include evidence-based
counseling and medications for tobacco
cessation in benefits provided to all federal
beneficiaries and in all federally-funded
healthcare programs;
4. invest in a new, broad
and balanced research agenda (basic,
clinical, public health, translational, dissemination)
to achieve future improvements in the
reach, effectiveness and adoption of tobacco
dependence interventions across both individuals and populations;
5.
invest in training and education to ensure
that all clinicians in the United States have the knowledge, skills
and support systems necessary to help their patients quit tobacco
use; and
6. establish a Smokers’ Health Fund by increasing
the Federal Excise Tax on cigarettes
by $2.00 per pack (from the current
rate of $0.39 to $2.39) with a similar
increase in the excise tax on other
tobacco products. At least 50% of this
new revenue generated by this tax increase (at
least $14 billion of the estimated $28
billion generated) should be earmarked to
pay for the components of this action
plan. (Adopted in 2003)
20. Tobacco and Harm Reduction
Resolved, that the American Dental Association
supports legislation that authorizes the Food and Drug Administration's
regulation of all tobacco products, including tobacco products
with risk reduction or exposure reduction claims, explicit or
implicit, and any other products offered to the public to promote
reduction in or cessation of tobacco use, and be it further
Resolved, that the Association supports regulation
of all tobacco products in order to ensure meaningful access to a
science base for evaluation of the effects of all tobacco products,
and be it further
Resolved, that the Association supports regulation
of all tobacco products in order to ensure that assessment, including
extensive premarket testing, and surveillance are completed, to secure
data to serve as a basis for developing and implementing appropriate
public health measures, and be it further
Resolved, that if legislation
is passed to authorize the FDA to regulate
all tobacco products, the Association urges
the FDA to authorize the use of harm reduction
strategies only as a component of a comprehensive
national tobacco control program that emphasizes
abstinence-oriented prevention and treatment. (Adopted in 2003)
Return to Top
(Updated 11/30/05)
|