In early 1977, as the newly appointed Secretary of Health, Education,and Welfare, I interviewed 150 top physicians and public healthprofessionals for positions in the department and asked howeach would mount a national health-promotion and disease-preventioncampaign. Without exception, they responded that any serioushealth-promotion program must attack smoking front and center.
How right they were. Despite the sharp decline in the proportionof Americans who smoke, we are still reaping the deadly harvestof decades of smoking. In 1995, more than 400,000 Americanswill die from tobacco-related ailments such as lung cancer,emphysema, and heart disease1; . . . [Full Text of this Article]
References
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