Nanny NYC Kicks Butts
John Tepper Marlin
(This was posted on Huffington Post on August 23, 2007 and attracted some colorful comments.)
Starting
in his first year as mayor, 2002, Mayor Michael Bloomberg has sought to
discourage smoking by New Yorkers. His efforts were opposed by many smokers,
bars and cigarette vendors, and the City was derided by Human Events as “Nanny
NYC”. But the Mayor’s efforts have
paid off well. One-fifth of NYC smokers have quit smoking since 2002, a higher
quit rate than in the nation. The Mayor crowed about this in his third annual
public health report, noting that NYC had already reached its 2008 targets
for lowering smoking and increasing colonoscopy screening – two years ahead of
schedule. Unlike his predecessor Rudy
Giuliani, who avoided drawing attention to his failures, the Mayor also
admitted that he had failed to lower drug deaths and raise the number of
breast-cancer screenings.
The Mayor’s appetite for health activism
was exceeded by the City Council when it voted earlier this year to ban metal
baseball bats from schools. The Mayor vetoed the bill and the City Council overrode
the veto. However, he is pressing on to help the great majority of City smokers
who have tried to quit but have failed. The facts are in a new report, Who’s Still Smoking, which is based
on the Community
Health Survey, an ongoing telephone poll of New Yorkers. NYC is campaigning for better health by learning
more about who is trying to quit and who is succeeding. The new report
identifies emotional distress and binge drinking as obstacles to quitting. More
surprising, it finds that fewer than one-fifth of NYC smokers are using nicotine-replacement
therapies (such as patches and gum) to help quit, despite evidence that these
therapies double the probability that a smoker will quit successfully.
Many
Americans are increasingly dissatisfied with the high cost of
medical care – yet smokers put their health at risk while spending
$2,500 a year on cigarettes if they smoke one pack per day. Studies show that
the United States spends by far the highest proportion of its gross product on
health care but its residents have a lower life
expectancy than other large developed countries like the UK, Canada,
France, Germany, Japan and Sweden. Within the United States, how much Americans spend on health care per capita
seems to have little connection with their longevity. A study by Christopher Murray and
others on mortality disparities among
“Eight Americas”
in Public
Library of Science - Medicine (Sept. 12, 2006) concludes that life expectancy is
explained primarily by chronic illnesses (for example, heart disease and
cancer) and injuries from alcohol-related traffic accidents in the 15-59 age
group – and not by the relative
mortality of infants or elderly people, incomes, violence or lack of health insurance.
Despite
its high spending on health care, New York State ranks a surprisingly poor 19th
out of 51 with an average life expectancy of 77.7 years. Hawaii has the highest
life expectancy at 80 years, whereas Washington, D.C. residents have a life
expectancy of only 72 years, a gap of eight years.
The
size of the gap is even larger at the county level. Asian-American women in
Bergen County, N.J. live the longest with an average life expectancy of 91
years. Native Americans in several rural counties in South Dakota have a
life expectancy of under 67 years, a difference of 36 years.
These and other statistics point to the
cost-effectiveness of public-health spending, the Nanny NYC derision
notwithstanding. To support preemptive public-health activism against chronic
illnesses worsened by smoking and poor nutrition, and against traffic
accidents, NYC’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene,
headed by Commissioner Thomas R. Frieden:
- publishes comparative data on health status in NYC's community boards,
- urges colonoscopy screenings,
- has alerted residents to the 75 percent increase in diabetes since 1990, and
how to prevent it,
- has researched safety factors for bicyclists,
- has prohibited smoking in restaurants,
- in a battle for better nutrition, proposes that all
restaurants cut down on use of trans fats,
- proposes that 2,000 (about 10 percent) of NYC’s
restaurants with standardized menu items list nutritional information, and
- is drawing attention to the fact that one million
adult NYC residents do not have health insurance, even though 700,000 of them
have jobs.
NYC
men smoke more than women (20 percent versus 15 percent), but men and women
quit at similar rates. Black and Hispanic smokers are more likely than whites
to try quitting, but are significantly less likely to succeed. More low-income
smokers tried to quit in 2006 than high-income smokers (68 percent versus 60
percent), but fewer succeeded. New Yorkers without a high school education were
more likely to try to quit than those who have a college degree (70 percent
versus 62 percent), but fewer succeeded (14 percent versus 20 percent).
Quitting
rates vary by borough. Staten Island’s smoking rate has been stuck since 2002,
while the citywide rate dropped by 20 percent, whereas rates in the Bronx,
Manhattan and Queens have all declined more than 20 percent. So NYC’s Health Department
is declaring the public health equivalent of a war on smoking in Staten Island,
giving away nicotine replacements at the Staten Island ferry's Whitehall terminal
Tuesdays-Thursdays, 3-6 p.m. from August
21 through September 20.
Every
New Yorker should look at NYC’s surveys
and alerts and should sign up for email alerts regarding health issues and
emergencies. Non-New Yorkers should look at this survey as a model for what
their community might do.
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