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FDA targets teen chewing tobacco use in campaign

Posted at 8:08 AM, Apr 19, 2016
and last updated 2016-04-19 11:08:56-04

WASHINGTON (AP) — Government health officials will team up with minor league baseball as part of a new campaign to discourage rural teenagers from using chewing tobacco.

Baseball stadiums will feature the campaign's central message this summer, "smokeless doesn't mean harmless," via advertising and promotions with players.

The Food and Drug Administration says its latest effort targets white, rural males who are more likely to use dip, chew and other smokeless tobacco products. More than 31 percent of rural males ages 12 to 17, or roughly 629,000 Americans, are at-risk for using chewing tobacco, according to the agency.

"In communities where smokeless tobacco use is part of the culture, reaching at-risk teens with compelling messaging is critical," said Mitch Zeller, director of the FDA's Center for Tobacco Products.

Zeller, who oversaw the anti-tobacco "Truth" campaign while working at the nonprofit American Legacy Foundation in the early 2000s, says many young people don't understand the health effects of smokeless tobacco. The new campaign is the first FDA effort to focus on those health risks, including gum disease, tooth loss and multiple forms of cancer.

The government effort comes as leading tobacco companies increase their focus on snuff, chewing tobacco and electronic cigarettes amid tax hikes, smoking bans, health concerns and social stigma that continue to erode cigarette sales.

Last October the FDA launched a $128-million campaign using hip-hop music and culture to try and educate African American and other urban minority youth groups about smoking risks.

The FDA gained authority to regulate certain aspects of the tobacco industry under a 2009 law that created the agency's tobacco center. Among other powers, the FDA can restrict marketing of tobacco products to young people and gives the agency authority to evaluate the health risks of new tobacco products before they launch.