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HealthyPharmacies.org seeks to curb smoking in California

11/5/2009

SAN FRANCISCO San Francisco and Berkeley, Calif., missed an opportunity to help smokers quit when the cities moved all tobacco sales out of pharmacies, according to a statement released by a new Bay Area health initiative Thursday. Instead of having smokers buy cigarettes in convenience stores and at other retailers, smokers should buy cigarettes only at pharmacy counters.

The new initiative is HealthyPharmacies.org, founded by executive director Stuart Skorman, who also founded Elephant Pharmacy in nearby Berkeley, and focused on making pharmacies centers of health and wellness at the community level as its raison d’etre.

Keeping cigarettes behind the pharmacy counter would help smokers quit, Skorman said, by giving pharmacists the tools to help educate smokers on how to lead healthier lives. When a smoker asks for a pack of cigarettes, pharmacy staff would have the opening to offer nicotine replacement, Skorman said, or point smokers in the direction of counseling and other tools. The approach wouldn’t require a prescription for tobacco but would offer smokers tools to help them quit.

In California alone, more than 4 million people smoke – more than the entire population of Oregon. About 90% of smokers start before age 18 and become addicted to nicotine. That addiction makes it tough to quit: more than 70% of smokers want to quit but don’t know how to do it.

Pharmacies are the only stores that are licensed to sell dangerous drugs, and Skorman suggested that tobacco must be treated as such. He believes that tighter controls would not only create access to quit-smoking support but could reduce the powerful point-of-purchase advertising that appeals to youth in convenience stores and other retail locations.

Calling this approach a public health and economic win, Skorman sees great potential for pharmacies to play a powerful role at the community level.

“We’re primarily focused on reducing tobacco use, but this approach would bring more people into pharmacies, too,” he said. “That’s good for business, and it’s good for the consumers, if they’re receiving positive guidance to live healthier lives.”HealthyPharmacies.org plans to pilot this concept by working with several cities to limit tobacco sales to only pharmacy counters and then measure the results – including changes in tobacco sales and smoking rates. Skorman is reaching out to public health advocates and pharmacies to partner in this effort and is exploring pilot projects in more than 50 U.S. cities.

For more information, visit http://healthypharmacies.org.

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