Vital Signs
Fighting Tobacco Disparities in the Gay Community

Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) persons are 50% to 200% more likely to smoke than the rest of the population, according to the National LGBT Tobacco Control Network. That’s one of the highest smoking rates of any minority group in the U.S. In 2005, the American Cancer Society estimated that over 300,000 LGBT people die each year from tobacco-related diseases. Given the tobacco industry’s well-documented history of aggressively marketing its products to racial/ethnic minorities and women, it’s no surprise that Big Tobacco targets this community, too—e.g., by offering financial support to LGBT festivals, bars, media and local organizations.
Still another factor contributing to LGBT smoking disparities is a lack of anti-smoking interventions that are culturally tailored to this population. To help close that information gap, the Boston-based National LGBT Tobacco Control Network offers a wealth of culturally competent resources for both smokers and health care professionals. For example:
• Fact sheets on topics like LGBT people and tobacco, smoking and HIV, and anti-tobacco community organizing.
• Smoking cessation strategies and tips for smokers and clinicians.
• A national directory of LGBT tobacco control professionals and projects.
• An online resource library with links to LGBT tobacco control events, publications, research, Web sites and downloadable LGBT-friendly anti-smoking materials.
• An annual LGBT Tobacco Summit that brings together tobacco control leaders from across the country to share solutions and best practices. This year’s summit will be held on June 9 in Phoenix, Arizona.
To further promote the sharing of information about what’s working in LGBT tobacco control efforts, the network publishes a quarterly newsletter, Sharing Our Lessons, that showcases successful model programs. A recent issue featured an in-depth case study of a Minnesota project that helped make the state’s tobacco quitlines more accessible to LGBT people.
For more information, visit www.lgbttobacco.org.
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Comments
These are some very good
Wed, 10/26/2011 - 4:07pm — donnald (not verified)These are some very good points, these people should be approached and exposed to anti-smoking messages just like the rest of us. I quit smoking three years ago and I am so proud of my achievement and that's thanks to an anti-smoking campaign. I also got full support for that in one of the New Jersey drug rehab centers. I've been a smoker for more than ten years, it's a relief that I left it all behind.
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