
Despite the nation’s “substantial progress in reducing cigarette smoking and secondhand smoke exposure” in the overall US population, this “progress has not been equal for all population groups,” according to the US Surgeon General’s new report on health disparities related to tobacco use.
“Tobacco use imposes a heavy toll on families across generations. Now is the time to accelerate our efforts to create a world in which zero lives are harmed by or lost to tobacco,” US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy said in a statement. “This report offers a vision for a tobacco-free future, focused on those who bear the greatest burden, and serves as a call to action for all people to play a role in realizing that vision.”
The last Surgeon General’s report on tobacco-related disparities was released more than two decades ago in 1998, with the most recent report showing that some of the disparities “have widened further,” according to a news release from the American Lung Association.