Exhibitions as Public Health Interventions: The University of Alabama Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society

2021 ◽  
pp. 000276422110108
Author(s):  
Robert B. Riter ◽  
Kevin Bailey ◽  
Jeff Hirschy

Can exhibitions of artifacts from the tobacco industry, its allies and critics, act as a public health intervention? The University of Alabama Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society is a curatorial and research center dedicated to the creation of exhibitions on the tobacco industry and its allies, the marketing of cigarettes and other tobacco products, and the efforts to counteract the use and promotion of cigarettes throughout the 20th century to the present day (Blum, 1994, p. 8). Physical and digital exhibitions provide social and historical context to increase public understanding of a deadly product which, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, kills 1,300 Americans a day. University of Alabama Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society collects “communication artifacts” of the tobacco industry, from ubiquitous advertisements to subtler promotional efforts such as financial support for museums and other cultural institutions. This summary of the center’s work spotlights archives, curated and made public through exhibitions.

2021 ◽  
pp. 000276422110031
Author(s):  
Robert B. Riter ◽  
Kevin Bailey ◽  
Jeff Hirschy

Can exhibitions of artifacts from the tobacco industry, its allies and critics, act as a public health intervention? The University of Alabama Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society is a curatorial and research center dedicated to the creation of exhibitions on the tobacco industry and its allies, the marketing of cigarettes and other tobacco products, and the efforts to counteract the use and promotion of cigarettes throughout the 20th century to the present day. Physical and digital exhibitions provide social and historical context to increase public understanding of a deadly product which, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, kills 1,300 Americans a day. Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society collects “communication artifacts” of the tobacco industry, from ubiquitous advertisements to subtler promotional efforts such as financial support for museums and other cultural institutions. This summary of the center’s work spotlights archives, curated and made public through exhibitions.


2021 ◽  
pp. 000276422110031
Author(s):  
David Lee ◽  

In November 2020, I spoke with Alan Blum, MD, scholar, collector, curator, exhibitor, activist, and director of the University of Alabama Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society (CSTS). He has been creating tobacco-themed exhibitions since the 1980s—in brick-and-mortar as well as digital settings—based on a prodigious collection of tobacco-related artifacts. Before joining CSTS, as founder of Doctors Ought to Care, a national organization of concerned and outspoken physicians, Blum satirized and protested at tobacco industry–sponsored events. In addition to being an avid museumgoer, he closely follows the tobacco industry’s sponsorship of museums and exhibitions. This article contains excerpts from our interview, with Blum addressing the dynamism of tobacco marketing, the irony of CSTS exhibitions, his recollections of past exhibitions, and what he regards as the complicity of other industries and professions. Be advised that the exhibitions Blum curates and the views he expresses “may be hazardous to people’s preconceptions.”


2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 967-974 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorie E Apollonio ◽  
Stanton A Glantz

Abstract Background Increasing tobacco taxes, and through them, prices, is an effective public health strategy to decrease tobacco use. The tobacco industry has developed multiple promotional strategies to undercut these effects; this study assessed promotions directed to wholesalers and retailers and manufacturer price changes that blunt the effects of tax and price increases. Methods We reviewed tobacco industry documents and contemporaneous research literature dated 1987 to 2016 to identify the nature, extent, and effectiveness of tobacco industry promotions and price changes used after state-level tobacco tax increases. Results Tobacco companies have created promotions to reduce the effectiveness of tobacco tax increases by encouraging established users to purchase tobacco in lower-tax jurisdictions and sometimes lowering manufacturer pricing to “undershift” smaller tax increases, so that tobacco prices increased by less than the amount of the tax. Conclusions Policymakers should address industry efforts to undercut an effective public health intervention through regulating minimum prices, limiting tobacco industry promotions, and by enacting tax increases that are large, immediate, and result in price increases. Implications Tobacco companies view excise tax increases on tobacco products as a critical business threat. To keep users from quitting or reducing tobacco use in response to tax increases, they have shifted manufacturer pricing and developed specific promotions that encourage customers to shop for lower-taxed products. Health authorities should address tobacco industry efforts to undercut the effects of taxes by regulating prices and promotions and passing large and immediate tax increases.


2019 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-18
Author(s):  
Lester Caplan

Personal reflections of Dr. Lester Caplan, a founding member of the Optometric Historical Society, on his involvement during the course of his life and his career as a private practitioner in Baltimore, MD, as an academic at the University of Alabama, and his leadership in public health optometry at the local, state and federal level.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. s10-s11
Author(s):  
Lina Elbadawi ◽  
Nadine Shehab ◽  
Jennifer N. Lind ◽  
Alexander Kallen ◽  
Melissa K. Schaefer ◽  
...  

Background: Contaminated pharmaceutical products pose serious infection risks to patients and can lead to significant morbidity and mortality. Contamination at the point of manufacturing or compounding (intrinsic contamination) has the potential to affect large numbers of patients. Public health plays a critical role in detecting and investigating such events. We identified investigations involving intrinsically contaminated pharmaceuticals to characterize the burden and scope of harm associated with these events. Methods: We reviewed Centers for Disease Control and Prevention records to identify US investigations between January 1, 2009, and December 31, 2018, involving laboratory-confirmed contamination of manufactured medications and pharmacy-compounded preparations (P-CPs), using relevant search terms (eg, “medication contamination”). Laboratory confirmation was defined as identification of a pathogen from a manufactured medication or P-CP. We determined the number and type of patient infections associated with these investigations, the number of states involved, pathogens identified, type of medication (sterile or nonsterile), route of administration, and how the contamination event was first identified. We excluded investigations when the mode of production was unknown. Results: We identified 20 investigations in at least 20 states involving laboratory-confirmed contamination of manufactured medications (n = 12) and P-CPs (n = 8). Patient infections were identified in 16 (80%) investigations (9 involving manufactured medications and 7 involving P-CPs) resulting in at least 1,183 infections and at least 73 deaths. Bloodstream infections were the most common infection type (n = 7, 44%). Waterborne pathogens (eg, Serratia marcescens, Burkholderia cepacia) were cultured from medications in 83% (n = 10) of investigations involving manufactured medications and 75% (n = 6) of investigations involving P-CPs. Contamination of sterile pharmaceutical products occurred in 14 (70%) investigations; 11 (79%) of these involved injectables. Information regarding how contaminated pharmaceuticals were first identified was documented for 18 investigations; most cases (n = 14, 78%) started with investigation of patient infections by facilities, public health, or both, which led to laboratory testing of pharmaceuticals and confirmation of contamination. Conclusions: The events summarized here likely underestimate the frequency of intrinsic contamination of pharmaceutical products in the United States. These events can have devastating consequences that impact patients across the country. Waterborne pathogens appear to be the most frequently identified source of contamination in both manufactured medications and P-CPs.Detection, investigation, control, and prevention of pharmaceutical contamination events benefit from collaboration between state and federal public health authorities; without public health intervention. Such contamination may have gone undetected and could have harmed additional patients.Funding: NoneDisclosures: None


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 33-62
Author(s):  
Sara Swenson

In this article, I explore how Buddhist charity workers in Vietnam interpret rising cancer rates through understandings of karma. Rather than framing cancer as a primarily physical or medical phenomenon, volunteers state that cancer is a product of collective moral failure. Corruption in public food production is both caused by and perpetuates bad karma, which negatively impacts global existence. Conversely, charity work creates merit, which can improve collective karma and benefit all living beings. I argue that through such interpretations of karma, Buddhist volunteers understand their charity at cancer hospitals as an affective and ethical form of public health intervention.


Author(s):  
Anne M. Coleman ◽  
Robert L. Middleton ◽  
Charles A. Lundquist ◽  
David L. Christensen

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