Pubdate: Sat, 27 Feb 1999 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Copyright: 1999 The Seattle Times Company Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Author: LAURA MECKLER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WARNING LABEL URGED FOR CIGARS Surgeon general points to teen use, health risks WASHINGTON -- Cigars are as deadly as cigarettes and widely used by teenagers yet face virtually no federal regulation, government health officials said yesterday, recommending a mandatory national warning label for the first time. Requiring health warnings on cigarettes and smokeless tobacco but not cigars sends the wrong message, Surgeon General David Satcher said. "The absence of labels on cigars implies cigars are different and don't carry the same risk," Satcher said. Top officials at the Health and Human Services Department hope the report by its inspector general will push another agency, the Federal Trade Commission, to require such warning labels. The FTC has been considering the matter since April, but has yet to announce a decision. The FTC has the power to require the labels on its own, although it plans to report to Congress on the issue this spring. Most boxes already include a label required under a settlement of a California court case. "Why do you need another one?" asked Norman Sharp, president of the Cigar Association of America. Critics respond that the California labels are not strong enough or consistently used. Satcher has been urging the FTC to require labels for some time. "It's frustrating that we have not made more progress on this issue," he said. Many cigar smokers discount the health risks. "I often think of them as producing less risk in terms of lung cancer than with cigarettes," said Michael Burnstein, 30, of New York City, who quit smoking cigarettes but still enjoys an occasional cigar. Montgomery Kosma, 31, an attorney from Annandale, Va., also smokes a cigar every few weeks. He figures he and other smokers can evaluate the risks on their own. The National Cancer Institute last year reported that although cigar smokers inhale less smoke than cigarette smokers, cigars can be just as toxic because they contain up to 90 times as much of some carcinogenic elements as cigarettes. And with higher quantities of such toxins, cigars can create even more harmful secondhand smoke. Regular cigar smokers greatly increase their risk of mouth, throat and lung cancer, the report found. Satcher and others say a warning label alone will not do much unless it is part of a larger effort to shift cultural attitudes. He is now working on a public awareness campaign on the dangers. In fact, beyond labels, the Inspector General's Office recommended that Satcher develop an "action plan" for educating the public about cigars, which have enjoyed a renaissance in the 1990s after years of public scorn. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck