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UNC-Chapel Hill Studies To Aid In Crafting Tobacco Regulations

A Duke University study found a link between poverty and smoking in adolescents.
Valentin Ottone via Flickr, Creative Commons

The federal Food and Drug Administration has tapped UNC-Chapel Hill researchers to compile data that  may lead to stronger tobacco regulations. 

One study will focus on effects of tobacco products on the lungs.  The other will examine what people know about the dangers of tobacco and how warnings can be improved.  

Kurt Ribisl is a professor of health behavior at UNC-Chapel Hill's Gillings School of Global Public Health.  He says most people are unaware of all the negative effects of tobacco.

"Some of the risks lead to issues with vascular disease, heart disease.  Most people think of lung cancer as being a major risk factor.  But in fact more people are dying of other factors than lung cancer..chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, emphysema and asthma.  So there's room for doing a better job,"says Ribisl.

Ribisl is using the five-year grant from the agency to assess how the dangers are conveyed.  He plans to use a variety of avenues, starting with focus groups.

"Really trying to understand what they know about the risk of tobacco products.  And then we're going to be doing large telephone surveys and then a series of studies where we're testing out different alternative ways of communicating this risk information to smokers."

In all, the FDA and the National Institutes of Health are putting more than $50 million into funding 14 tobacco study grants.  UNC-Chapel Hill is the only institution to be awarded two of those grants.

Gurnal Scott joined North Carolina Public Radio in March 2012 after several stops in radio and television. After graduating from the College of Charleston in his South Carolina hometown, he began his career in radio there. He started as a sports reporter at News/Talk Radio WTMA and won five Sportscaster of the Year awards. In 1997, Gurnal moved on to television as general assignment reporter and weekend anchor for WCSC-TV in Charleston. He anchored the market's top-rated weekend newscasts until leaving Charleston for Memphis, TN in 2002. Gurnal worked at WPTY-TV for two years before returning to his roots in radio. He joined the staff of Memphis' NewsRadio 600 WREC in 2004 eventually rising to News Director. In 2006, Raleigh news radio station WPTF came calling and he became the station's chief correspondent. Gurnal’s reporting has been honored by the South Carolina Broadcasters Association, the North Carolina Associated Press, and the Radio Television Digital News Association of the Carolinas.
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