Trump Budget Cuts Affect Anti-Smoking Programs

The New York Times (5/15, Jewett , Thacker) reports that budget cuts under the Trump Administration have affected anti-smoking programs across the United States. Experts on tobacco control said the “funding cuts would set back a quarter-century of public health efforts that have driven the smoking rate to a record low and saved lives and billions of dollars in health care spending.” FDA officials “fired many staff members who levied fines on retailers that sold tobacco to minors or marketed illicit vapes. Some scientists who were experts in addiction and toxicology lost their jobs.” Meanwhile, the NIH “canceled grants to researchers examining tobacco use among certain groups, including L.G.B.T.Q. youths, Black people and young people.” The White House also closed the CDC’s Office on Smoking and Health. The cuts were discussed during budget hearings on Wednesday, with lawmakers expressing concerns to HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

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Posted in In The News.