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4/7/2021 Menthol Cigarettes Kill Many Black People. A Ban May Finally Be Near. - The New York Times <br />https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/22/health/methol-smoking-ban.html?eType=EmailBlastContent&eId=bd8daf2b-5b8f-41c2-9965-e86e972f975f 1/4 <br />Menthol Cigarettes Kill Many Black People. A Ban May Finally Be Near. <br />Advocates are hoping that President Biden will soon come out in favor of banning mint-flavored cigarettes and other tobacco products. <br />By Sheila Kaplan <br />March 22, 2021 <br />The banning of menthol cigarettes, the mint-flavored products that have been aggressively marketed to Black Americans, has long been <br />an elusive goal for public health regulators. <br />But Covid-19 and the Black Lives Matter movement have put new pressure on Congress and the White House to reduce racial health <br />disparities. And there are few starker examples than this: Black smokers smoke less but die of heart attacks, strokes and other causes <br />linked to tobacco use at higher rates than white smokers do, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And 85 percent <br />of Black smokers use Newport, Kool and other menthol brands that are easier to become addicted to and harder to quit than plain tobacco, <br />according to the Food and Drug Administration. <br />“Covid-19 exposed the discriminatory treatment that Black people have been facing for hundreds of years,” said Dr. Phillip Gardiner, a co- <br />chairman of the African American Tobacco Control Leadership Council, which has been pushing for menthol bans in communities across <br />the country. Calling menthol cigarettes and cigarillos “main vectors” of disease and death among Black Americans, he added, “It’s <br />precisely at this time that we need strong public health measures.” <br />There is now growing momentum in Congress to enact a ban. In states and municipalities across the country, Black public health activists <br />have been organizing support and getting new laws passed at the state and local level. Public opposition among white parents to all <br />flavored e-cigarettes, including menthol, has brought new resources to the issue. And the F.D.A. is under a court order to respond to a <br />citizens’ petition to ban menthol by April 29. <br />Advocates are hoping that President Biden, whose campaign had strong support from Black voters and who has put addressing health <br />inequities front and center among his goals, will soon come out in favor of a ban. <br />“I have no doubt that it’s time for a ban on menthol,” said Representative Karen Bass, of California, who led the Congressional Black <br />Caucus during the last Congress. “We should never allow a chemical that is specifically targeted to a population, that increases death, no <br />matter who it is. In this case, it’s menthol and the Black population. I’m so excited that we have an administration that puts racial equity <br />and health disparities at top of its agenda.” <br />Kevin Munoz, a spokesman for the White House, declined to say whether Mr. Biden supported a menthol ban, but he noted the president’s <br />past support for tobacco control measures. <br />“We are thinking about all of our options that could help reduce tobacco use and address persistent disparities,” Mr. Munoz said. <br />Dr. Gardiner and other public health advocates are particularly concerned about the growing popularity of menthol cigars and cigarillos <br />among Black teenagers. The 2020 National Youth Tobacco Survey, conducted by the federal government, found that 6.5 percent of Black <br />students in high school and middle school, smoked cigars and cigarillos compared with 2.5 percent who smoked traditional cigarettes. The <br />F.D.A. says that menthol is the preferred flavor for the cigarillos, which are cheap and mass-produced, unlike premium cigars. <br />https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/22/health/methol-smoking-ban.html