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California Medical Association votes to endorse raising of smoking age to 21

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Posted 12:01PM on Monday 25th February 2002 ( 23 years ago )
LOS ANGELES - Members of the California Medical Association voted to urge the state to increase its smoking age from 18 to 21 -- higher than any other state. <br> <br> A resolution approved Sunday at the association&#39;s annual meeting in Anaheim directs the group&#39;s lobbyists to support any legislation that would raise the legal age for buying, possessing or receiving tobacco products, though no such legislation is pending. <br> <br> The association, which represents 35,000 physicians, also wants to make it illegal to sell cigarettes to those younger than 21. <br> <br> &#34;I am very pleased that the CMA, in its wisdom, decided to support this policy,&#34; said Dr. Leonard Klay, an obstetrician-gynecologist from Santa Rosa. He introduced the measure at the association&#39;s annual meeting, which drew more than 400 delegates. <br> <br> &#34;This is great news for the health of all Californians,&#34; he said. &#34;We know that people who start smoking at a young age, especially, become addicted to deadly nicotine. My hope is that a higher age would help prevent some of these horrible smoking deaths people suffer.&#34; <br> <br> The resolution was approved on a voice vote with no dissent, association spokesman Peter Warren said Monday. <br> <br> If legislation increasing the smoking age is ever introduced in California, the CMA has six full-time lobbyists that could be devoted to building coalitions in support of it, Warren said. <br> <br> &#34;This is probably something whose time has come, at least here, and it will come elsewhere,&#34; Warren said. &#34;Of course, it requires some legislation and then we will support it.&#34; <br> <br> For at least 20 years, the association has been advocating anti-tobacco and anti-smoking measures. The organization supported the Smoke-free Workplace Act of 1994 that banned smoking in restaurants and most other California workplaces. The smoking ban was extended to bars in January 1998. <br> <br> Forty-seven states have a minimum age of 18 to buy tobacco; Alabama, Alaska and Utah set the minimum age at 19. A 1992 directive from Congress had called for a minimum of at least 18. <br> <br> The California medical group&#39;s House of Delegates also voted to support increased fines and enforcement efforts to prevent minors from being exposed to tobacco products. <br> <br> The American Lung Association does not support raising the legal smoking age, instead saying efforts would be better spent enforcing current laws. <br> <br> The Lung Association estimates about 90 percent of all smokers pick up the habit before the age of 21. More than 430,000 Americans die each year from smoking-related diseases. <br> <br>

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