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Study suggests raising legal age to 21 may cut cigarette smoking
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  • Study suggests raising legal age to 21 may cut cigarette smoking

Study suggests raising legal age to 21 may cut cigarette smoking

FP Archives • March 16, 2015, 17:41:54 IST
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Increasing the minimum age to buy cigarettes to 21 could help decrease the prevalence of tobacco use and save lives, a new US study has claimed.

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Study suggests raising legal age to 21 may cut cigarette smoking

Washington: Increasing the minimum age to buy cigarettes to 21 could help decrease the prevalence of tobacco use and save lives, a new US study has claimed. A committee of US experts estimated the likely reduction in tobacco-use initiation that would be achieved by raising the minimum age of legal access (MLA) to tobacco products to 19, 21 or 25 years old. [caption id=“attachment_2156587” align=“alignleft” width=“380” class=" “] ![Representational image. AFP ](https://images.firstpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Smoking-Rep-Image.-380-AFP.jpg) Representational image. AFP[/caption] Researchers used two tobacco-use simulation models to quantify the accompanying public health outcomes. Raising the MLA to age 21 likely will have a substantially greater impact on reducing the initiation of tobacco use - defined as having smoked 100 cigarettes - than raising it to 19, researchers said. However, the added effect of raising the minimum age beyond age 21 to age 25 would probably be considerably smaller, according to a report from the Institute of Medicine. Underage users rely primarily on social sources - friends and relatives - to get tobacco, and there is little evidence that these individuals are obtaining tobacco from the illegal commercial market. Between ages 15 and 17, mobility increases with driving privileges, and social networks and potential sources of tobacco start to increase as some adolescents take on part-time jobs with co-workers who may be over the MLA. Therefore, increasing the MLA to 19 may not change social sources substantially for this age group, but raising the MLA to 21 is likely to have a considerable impact on initiation, the study suggests. “While the development of some cognitive abilities is achieved by age 16, the parts of the brain most responsible for decision making, impulse control and peer susceptibility and conformity continue to develop until about age 25,” said committee chair Richard Bonnie, professor of medicine and law at the University of Virginia. The committee emphasised that policy decisions about the MLA should consider other factors in addition to projected health outcomes. One of those factors is the relative maturity of adolescents and young adults. Of the people who have ever smoked daily, 90 per cent first tried a cigarette before 19 years of age, and nearly all others tried their first cigarette before the age of 26. This strongly suggests that if someone is not a regular tobacco user by age 25, it is highly unlikely he or she will become one, researchers said. If the MLA were raised now, the report says that in 2100 there would be about a 3 per cent decrease in smoking prevalence for an MLA of 19, a 12 per cent decrease for an MLA of 21 and a 16 per cent decrease for an MLA of 25. Given the likelihood that raising the MLA would decrease the rates of initiation of tobacco use, tobacco-related disease and death consequently also would decrease, researchers said. PTI

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