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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
Office on Smoking and Health
Tel: 1-800-CDC-INFO
(1-800-232-4636)
TTY: 1-888-232-6348
E-mail: tobaccoinfo@cdc.gov
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2000 Surgeon General's Report—Reducing Tobacco Use
Tobacco Timeline
Disclaimer
Highlights
- Cigarettes were first introduced in the United States in the early
19th century. Before this, tobacco was used primarily in pipes and cigars,
by chewing, and in snuff.
- By the time of the Civil War, cigarette use had become more popular.
Federal tax was first imposed on cigarettes in 1864. Shortly afterwards,
the development of the cigarette manufacturing industry led to their
quickly becoming a major U.S. tobacco product.
- At the same time, the populist health reform movement led to early
anti-smoking activity. From 1880–1920, this activity was largely motivated
by moral and hygienic concerns rather than health issues.
- The milder flue-cured tobacco blends used in cigarettes during the
early 20th century made the smoke easier to inhale and increased nicotine
absorption into the bloodstream.
- During World War I, Army surgeons praised cigarettes for helping
the wounded relax and easing their pain.
- Smoking was first linked to lung cancer and other diseases in the
late 1940s and early 1950s.
- In 1956, a Surgeon General’s scientific study group determined that
there was a causal relationship between excessive cigarette smoking
and lung cancer.
- In England, the 1962 Royal College of Physicians report emphasized
smoking’s causative role in lung cancer.
- Anti-smoking messages had a significant impact on cigarette sales;
however, when cigarette advertising on television and radio was banned
in 1969, anti-smoking messages were discontinued.
- The 1972 Surgeon General’s report became the first of a series of
science-based reports to identify environmental tobacco smoke (ETS)
as a health risk to nonsmokers.
- In 1973, Arizona became the first state to restrict smoking in a
number of public places explicitly because ETS exposure is a public
hazard.
- By the mid-1970s, the federal government began administratively
regulating smoking within government domains. In 1975, the Army and
Navy stopped including cigarettes in rations for service members. Smoking
was restricted in all federal government facilities in 1979 and was
banned in the White House in 1993.
- In 1988, Congress prohibited smoking on domestic commercial airline
flights scheduled for 2 hours or less. By 1990, the ban was extended
to all commercial U.S. flights.
- In 1992, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) classified ETS
as a "Group A" carcinogen, the most dangerous class of carcinogen.
- In 1994, Mississippi became the first state to sue the tobacco industry
to recover Medicaid costs for tobacco-related illnesses, settling its
suit in 1997. A total of 46 states eventually filed similar suits. Three
other states settled individually with the tobacco industry—Florida
(1997), Texas (1998), and Minnesota (1998).
- On November 23, 1998, the tobacco industry approved to a 46-state
Master Settlement Agreement, the largest settlement in history, totaling
nearly $206 billion to be paid through the year 2025. The settlement
agreement contained a number of important public health provisions.
- In April 1999, as part of the Master Settlement Agreement, the major
U.S. tobacco companies agreed to remove all advertising from outdoor
and transit billboards across the nation. The remaining time on at least
3,000 billboard leases, valued at $100 million, was turned over to the
states for posting anti-tobacco messages.
- On March 21, 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court narrowly affirmed a 1998
decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit and ruled
that the FDA lacks jurisdiction under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act to regulate tobacco products. As a result, the FDA’s proposed rule
to reduce access and appeal of tobacco products for young people became
invalid.
Disclaimer: Data and findings provided on this page reflect the content of
this particular Surgeon General's Report. More recent information may exist
elsewhere on the Smoking & Tobacco Use Web site (for example, in fact sheets,
frequently asked questions, or other materials that are reviewed on a regular
basis and updated accordingly).
Page last updated August 9, 2000