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Persons using assistive technology might not be able to fully access information in this file. For assistance, please send e-mail to: mmwrq@cdc.gov. Type 508 Accommodation and the title of the report in the subject line of e-mail. Smokeless Tobacco Use in Rural AlaskaReported rates of smokeless tobacco use have been consistently much lower for females than for males (1-8). Approximately 2% of females of all ages are estimated to have used smokeless tobacco in the last year (1). However, among American Indian/Alaskan Native (AI/AN) children, female and male usage rates are similar (9,10,11). In addition, the reported number of smokeless tobacco users in this population is substantially higher than in the general U.S. population of the same age (9,10,11). Data from a 1986 Indian Health Service (IHS) survey conducted in Alaska showed that almost as many Alaskan school-aged girls are using smokeless tobacco products as school-aged boys. Data were collected in the spring of 1986 from voluntary respondents, both Alaskan Natives and non-Natives, in eight rural regions of Alaska. A nine-question, self-administered survey was distributed by IHS dental staff to students in grades K-12 who had volunteered to participate in the survey. The number of girls and boys responding was 2,454 and 2,511, respectively; they ranged from 5 to 18 years of age. Results indicated that 27.5% of girls and 33.7% of boys who responded use smokeless tobacco products (Table 2). A user was defined as anyone who responded "yes" to the question, "Do you use smokeless tobacco products?" For 5-year-olds, 16.9% of girls and 9.8% of boys reported using smokeless tobacco products. For girls, the duration of use for smokeless tobacco products ranged from 1.3 years for 5-year-olds to 7.9 years for 18-year-olds (Table 3). For boys, duration of use ranged from 1.0 year for 5-year-olds to 6.5 years for 18-year-olds. The average 18-year-old had been using smokeless tobacco for about 7.5 years. The IHS survey did not question whether responding smokeless tobacco users used snuff or chewing tobacco. However, 84% of users indicated that they used a particular brand of snuff most often. On average, girls used 1.1 cans of snuff a week, and boys used 1.4 cans; there were no consistent age-specific trends (Table 4). In contrast, data from the Inspector General's survey conducted in 1985 revealed that smokeless tobacco users 11 to 19 years of age used an average of 2.9 cans of snuff per week (2). The most frequently reported level of snuff use was one can per week. In the IHS survey, 43% of girls and 45% of boys who responded reported having tried smokeless tobacco. Sixty percent of respondents indicated that they were aware of health risks associated with smokeless tobacco use, and 93% of those respondents listed cancer as a possible health problem. The Inspector General's survey reported that 89% of users knew that smokeless tobacco can be harmful to health, and 79% reported oral cancer as a risk associated with smokeless tobacco use; 46% thought they were personally at risk for these adverse health effects (2). Reported by C Schlife, Alaska Area Native Health Svc, Indian Health Svc; Dental Disease Prevention Activity, Center for Prevention Services, CDC. Editorial NoteEditorial Note: The Health Consequences of Using Smokeless Tobacco: A Report of the Advisory Committee to the Surgeon General states that the highest rates of smokeless tobacco use in the United States are among teenage and young adult males (1). A report by the Office of the Inspector General and the Office of Analysis and Inspections of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Youth Use of Smokeless Tobacco: More Than a Pinch of Trouble, also reports that smokeless tobacco users among youth are predominately white males (2). The prevalence of smokeless tobacco use among male adolescents as reported from regional and state surveys indicate usage rates as high as 30%-40% in some junior and senior high schools (3-8). A 1985 Dane County, Wisconsin, survey of students in grades 7-12 reported regular use of smokeless tobacco products from 9% of 7th-grade boys to 22% of 12th-grade boys (12). Additional data indicate that smokeless tobacco use in AI/AN children is substantially higher than in the general population of the same age. Weekly smokeless tobacco use was reported by 34% of girls and 43% of boys from 144 AI/AN adolescents (mean age 12.3 years) from Alaska and Washington (9). Another survey reported weekly smokeless tobacco use of 27.4% for 135 American Indian girls and 20.2% for 119 boys (mean age 13.8 years) in Washington (10). Two surveys conducted by IHS in the 1984/85 school year in grades 4-8 at four schools on Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota, and at Browning Public School, Blackfoot Indian Reservation, Montana, indicated that 47% of boys and 45% of girls currently use smokeless tobacco products (11). In order to deal with the potential health risks from smokeless tobacco use, the U.S. Congress passed the "Comprehensive Smokeless Tobacco Health Education Act of 1986," P.L. 99-252 on February 27, 1986. This act provides for the following:
References
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