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American Lung Association

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Tobacco Report: PA Earns Failing Grades

The American Lung Association report gives Pennsylvania two failing grades.

  The American Lung Association says Pennsylvania is not adequately funding programs to protect children and cut back on illnesses related to tobacco use. This comes as a result of Wednesday’s release of its State of Tobacco Control 2013 report. This is the 11th year for the report which looks at how states and the federal government are spending their money on tobacco control programs. Pennsylvania received the following grades for 2012. “Pennsylvania must make it a priority to invest in programs that keep kids off tobacco and to help smokers quit,” says Deb Brown, president and CEO of the American Lung Association of the Mid-Atlantic, in a press release.  “That starts with increasing Pennsylvania’s current level of tobacco prevention and…

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Matt Zukowski

3:57 am on Tuesday, January 22, 2013

"So lets be generous to your arguement and say 75% of those are caused by smoke related tobacco. " That's actually close to reality. The yearly fatality rate is ~6800 specifically for smoking. "We are still at nearly 10,000 new cancers every year caused by smokeless tobacco. " As opposed to 400,000+ fatalities from SMOKING, of which ~6800 are from oral cancers? This is where that 98% less harmful…   more ›

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Lung Association Gives Delaware County an "F"

Across Pennsylvania, it's not alone in its failing grade.

Delaware County's level of ozone has earned it an "F" in a new report by the American Lung Association. The association's 2012 "State of the Air" report also found that the Philadelphia-Camden-Vineland metro area ranks among the 10 most polluted areas in the nation for year-round particle pollution. State of the Air shows that we’re making steady progress in cutting dangerous pollution from the air as a result of cleanup efforts required under the Clean Air Act," Deb Brown, president and CEO of the American Lung Association of the Mid-Atlantic, said in a news release.  "But millions of Americans across the country ... are still forced to breathe unhealthy levels of air pollution as a result of air quality standards that are outdated." …

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