WASHINGTON, Ind. - There will be a community conversation on local tobacco retailer data and the link between tobacco use and mental health.
The Denver City Council is once again considering a ban on flavored tobacco and nicotine products. If supporters get their ...
Tobacco use rates among youth have dropped to their lowest level in 25 years, driven by the decline ... [+] in e-cigarette use by high schoolers. Tobacco use among U.S. high school students has ...
Tobacco use is down to a 25-year low among American teenagers, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC said last week that 2.25 million middle and high school students ...
Restrict the marketing and distribution of cigarettes and smokeless tobacco. Focus on limiting the impact of advertising on youth. Expand warning labels. Stop the use of such characterizations ... and ...
American teen tobacco use has fallen to a 25-year-low, according to new data analyzed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that was ...
Tobacco product use among U.S. pre-teens and teens has fallen to the lowest levels seen in 25 years, according to new federal data published Thursday. Researchers from the Centers for Disease ...
As recently as 2019, 23 percent, or just over 6 million, had reported current tobacco use, driven almost entirely by e-cigarette use, at 20 percent. E-cigarettes are still the most popular choice ...
The rate of youth tobacco use has dropped to its lowest ... is dangerous and the FDA must swiftly finalize this review process and use all its enforcement tools available to make sure that kids ...
Teen tobacco use has dropped to its lowest point in 25 years, a CDC survey published Thursday found, a milestone that follows a 20% decline since last year as the number of middle and high ...
Oct. 17 (UPI) --About 2.25 million U.S. middle- and high-school students this year say they use tobacco products, which is 500,000 fewer than a year ago, the Centers for Disease Control said Thursday.
A survey of U.S. high school and middle school students found that the decline in tobacco use stemmed from a drop in the number of kids using e-cigarettes, still the preferred product among youth ...