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July 2012 e-Newsletter

 
 
July 2012 e-Newsletter 
 
 
July 19, 2012
A Note from the Program Manager
Kim Alford
 
 
 
 
 
The National Native Network is beginning its fifth and final year of its grant cycle with the Inter-Tribal Council of Michigan (June 29, 2008-June 20, 2013).  As this fifth year of the CDC/ Office of Smoking and Health grant is just beginning, it is also a time that we are looking toward the future of the next grant cycle to pursue and ensure continuance of the resources and technical assistance that is offered by the National Native Network.  We have achieved many great things during these past several years in addition to creating an entire network of individuals, Tribes, Tribal Organizations, stakeholders and partners to turn to for experience, expertise, guidance, technical assistance, partnerships, resources, and strength, in the uphill fight against commercial tobacco abuse and prevention.  Here is a brief summary of some of the work that has occurred over the last couple of years.  
 
Membership and Social Marketing Resources
 
The Network has grown to over 300 members and over 800 individuals, tribes and tribal organizations to which we distribute tribal specific information and resources relevant to decreasing commercial tobacco prevalence in Indian Country.   Our main emphasis to distribute this information and resources is through our website, www.keepitsacred.org . 
 
 Anyone can visit our website; however, becoming a member of the National Native Network allows greater access to the website, as well as receiving our newsletter, e-blasts, and other electronic communications.  The website has expanded, featuring additional resources such as funding resources, tribal job opportunities, smoke-free casino news, chronic disease and tobacco news, and youth and tobacco information.  You will also find a new resource, the Indian Health Service Field Guide “Implementing Tobacco Control into the Primary Health Care Setting”, as an easy access tool kit.  More resources and examples of actual Tribal Commercial Tobacco Resolutions and Policies have been added to the Tribal Smoke-Free Policy Tool Kit, now in its third edition.   Our partnership with OSIYO Communications has enabled a broader use of our website, facebook, and twitter, all updated on a daily basis.  
 
Publications
 
Three publications have been written by the National Native Network and are available on the website and available in print to you as a resource in your work toward commercial tobacco policy implementation:
 
A tribal tobacco funding position paper titled “For As Long As the Grasses Grow and Rivers Flow” explaining the history of commercial tobacco control programs in relationship to use among AI/AN; the political obligation of the federal government in ensuring tribal self-governance, and the importance of direct funding to tribal nations for tobacco control; and
Two policy briefs on very important topics in tribal tobacco control: Smoke-Free Policies: Protecting Tribal Sovereignty and Community Health and Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act: Strengthening Tribal Sovereignty and Health. 
 
The National Native Network will be releasing a new publication during this fiscal year:  “Promising Practices in Commercial Tobacco Control and Prevention in Indian Country”.   We are well aware that mainstream promising and best practices may not work well in our Tribal communities, lacking the cultural and traditional aspects that would make an impact on sustainable change.   We are currently compiling the great work that is making an impact in reducing commercial tobacco abuse and prevention in Indian Country.  Once the publication is completed, technical assistance will be provided toward implementation in Tribal communities.  
 
National Review
 
In this past year, we have partnered with the California Rural Indian Health Board (CRIHB).  Staff at CRIHB is working on a national review to better understand relationships and funding between States, Tribal Organizations, and Tribal Communities, as well as gaps and barriers towards commercial policies, systems, and environmental changes.  This work will enable the National Native Network and other organizations to create more focused strategies toward technical assistance and resources targeting Tribal communities in reducing commercial tobacco prevalence.  A final report is expected in September 2012.  
 
Resource Distribution Project
 
The National Native Network implemented the Resource Distribution Project as a pilot program this last year.  Seven Champions from Tribes and Tribal Organizations were identified and trained in detail on the resources available through the Network.  These Champions then trained ten or more tribes within their respective regions on the resources and technical assistance available to them through the Network.  This impacted over 70 Tribal Communities nationwide.  This new year will repeat the project in 2 different regional locations impacting as many as 150 Tribal Communities.  The current Champions are listed and described on our website, and are listed below:
 
Great Lakes Inter-Tribal Council – Teresa Barber, WI Native American Tobacco Network Director  Wisconsin     
                Tribes
ClearWay MN – CoCo Villaluz, Community Development Manager   Minnesota Tribes
Saginaw-Chippewa – John Johnson, Prevention Specialist CPC-M   Michigan Tribes
Cherokee Nation - June Maher - Tobacco Prevention Coordinator   Oklahoma Tribes
Inter-Tribal Council of Arizona -  Keisha Robinson, Epidemiologist   Arizona Tribes
California Rural Indian Health Board – Antoinette Medina, Health Education Specialist II  California, Utah, Nevada 
                Tries
Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board – Kerry Lopez, Western Tribal Diabetes Project, Project Assistant 
                Oregon, Washington, Idaho Tribes
 
Webinars
 
During the Resource Distribution Project training workshop, Champions identified needed technical assistance topics to aid Tribes in commercial tobacco policy and systems change.   The National Native Network has developed and implemented a monthly technical assistance webinar series to include these topics – see below.  The intended dates for webinar implementation will be the last Tuesday of each month, from 3:00-4:00 EST and are posted on our website’s events section.  
Public Health Law in Indian Country implemented April 24, 2012, by JT Petherick, Cherokee Nation
Advanced Media Strategy in the Social Age  implemented May, 29, 2012 by Randy Gibson, Cherokee Nation;
                Seth Huntley and Shawn Arthur, OSIYO Communications
Native Fusion – Mobilizing a Community as a Whole  implemented June 26, 2012 by CoCo Villaluz
Understanding FDA Tobacco Control Act in Indian Country upcoming July 31, 2012 by Gail Cherry-Peppers
Consequences of Second Hand Smoke TBD
SWAT Teams (Students Working Against Tobacco) TBD
Successful Coalitions TBD
Funding Sources/Grant Writing TBD
Policy Implementation Strategies TBD
 
Advocacy
 
The National Native Network Tribal Health Alliance has been blessed to have three well known Native American celebrities who are working to assist our mission.  Tatanka Means, Native American actor/comedian/speaker, has become an advocate and spokesperson for the Network.  Tatanka weaves commercial tobacco abuse and prevention messages into his presentations throughout the nation.  See more about Tatanka at www.tatankameans.com.  Carla-Rae (Holland), Native American TV-film/theater actress, will be developing a PSA “keep it sacred” message on commercial tobacco abuse and prevention for the National Native Network.   See more about Carla-Rae at www.carla-rae.com .   James Afcan, of Miracle Drummers and Dancers, Inc., travels with his drummers and dancers throughout Alaska, taking his messages of commercial tobacco abuse and prevention during their performances.   See more about the National Native Network Tribal Health Alliance here 
 
We need your feedback!  
 
As you can see, we have been actively pursuing needed technical assistance, resources, and social media to distribute to Tribes, Tribal Organizations, and stakeholders for policy, systems, and environmental change in commercial tobacco control and prevention.   As stated in the first paragraph of this article, we are looking toward the future of the next grant cycle to pursue and ensure continuance of the resources and technical assistance offered by the National Native Network.   We would like to know your priorities and needs as to what more the National Native Network can do to help make these changes in Tribal Communities.  How can we build on our solid base to improve our work?  Your opinion is valuable and matters.  We would like to hear back from you.   Please contact us to let us know your comments.  
 
Sincerely, 
 
Kim Alford
Program Manager
National Native Network
 
 
 
Understanding FDA Tobacco Control Act in Indian Country
Join us for a Webinar on July 31
 
Space is limited.
Reserve your Webinar seat now at:
Title:  Understanding FDA Tobacco Control Act in Indian Country 
 
Date:  Tuesday, July 31, 2012 
Time:  3:00 – 4:00 EST 
 
Presenters: 
Heather Althouse 
Senior Regulatory Counsel, 
Office of Compliance and Enforcement, 
Center for Tobacco Products, 
U.S. Food and Drug Administration 
 
Gail Cherry-Peppers, DDS, MS 
Public Health Liaison Branch, Office of Policy 
Center for Tobacco Products, 
US Food and Drug Administration
 
Title: Understanding FDA Tobacco Control Act in Indian Country
Date: Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Time: 3:00 PM - 4:00 AM EDT
 
After registering you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the Webinar.
System Requirements
PC-based attendees
Required: Windows® 7, Vista, XP or 2003 Server
Macintosh®-based attendees
Required: Mac OS® X 10.5 or newer
 
 
 
Did you know that if the friends of the people who are fans of our page would 'like' us, we would be able to extend our mission to over 260,000 people!? Please ask your friends to like us and help keep tobacco sacred!
 
 
 
 
 
Upcoming Events
 
Recovery, Social Rehabilitation, and Living Tobacco Free
Hosted by: The Smoking Cessation Leadership Center (SCLC)
 
July 31, 2012 at 1:00-2:30 pm Eastern Time
The Smoking Cessation Leadership Center (SCLC) will host a free webinar with presenter Dori S. Hutchinson, Sc.D., Director of Services, Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation at Boston University, and Associate Clinical Professor at Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences at Boston University. Webinar objectives:  Provide a brief overview of the toll of tobacco among those with serious mental illness; Discuss a framework for recovery; Explain strategies to assess and develop readiness for recovery and social rehabilitation; Describe the importance of the role of peers in tobacco cessation; and Study real life case studies. Click here to register. For questions, contact Reason Reyes, SCLC Director of Technical Assistance, at  This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , or call toll-free (877) 509-3786.  This webinar will be recorded and may be viewed online on the Smoking Cessation Leadership Center’s website after the presentation.
 
 
Smokefree Casinos Ancillary Session at the National Conference on Tobacco or Health
Hosted by: American Nonsmokers' Rights Foundation
 
Pass the word! American Nonsmokers' Rights Foundation is hosting an ancillary session for Smokefree Casinos at the National Conference on Tobacco or Health, Monday, August 13, 9:00 am - 4:00 pm. Everyone is invited to this agenda packed day full of useful ideas for advancing the smokefree casino movement. Hear from colleagues about how to survey players clubs and work with casino management, plus learn how one community generated 1,000 testimonials in support of smokefree casinos. If you are facing the daunting challenge of building social and political will for smokefree casinos in your area - or facing the prospect of new casino expansion into your state or tribe, this might be a good workshop to attend. Space is limited for this free event. For more information and RSVP details, contact Char at:  This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Please click here to download a pdf copy of the Save the Date flyer.
 
 
NAQC Conference 2012
Hosted by: North American Quitline Consortium
 
It is with great pleasure that NAQC invites all members and others dedicated to improving the effectiveness of and access to quitline services to register for our upcoming conference. NAQC Conference 2012, QUITLINE INNOVATION AND SUSTAINABILITY: Exploring Strategies and Seizing Opportunities in Challenging Times, will take place August 13th and 14th in Kansas City, Missouri as an ancillary meeting to the National Conference on Tobacco or Health.  
 
CONFERENCE OVERVIEW
The promotion and delivery of quality, evidence-based quitline services in the midst of difficult fiscal climates, ongoing healthcare reforms, shifting policy landscapes and an ever-growing demand for cessation services remains a critical priority for the entire quitline community and our partners. NAQC Conference 2012 will be the only North American conference to focus solely on building the capacity of the quitline community to improve the availability and quality of its services while responding to these mounting challenges and opportunities.
 
GENERAL TIMELINE
Registration Opens: February 2, 2012
Registration Closes: July 27, 2012 
Call for Abstracts Opens: March 5, 2012
Call for Abstracts Closes: April 2, 2012
 
HOW TO REGISTER
Registration for the conference is an online process using a brief survey. We have made it possible for you to start and stop the survey as needed, however, once submitted, you cannot return to edit your responses. Should you have questions or need to resubmit your survey please contact    This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it  or 800-398-5489 ext. 701.
 
 
 
Retailers must comply with federal laws prohibiting the sale of cigarettes, cigarette tobacco, roll-your-own tobacco, and smokeless tobacco to youth.
 
Pledge to Protect Kids from Tobacco
 
Take the pledge to support responsible retailing. Retailers who follow the law and refuse to sell tobacco to youth help break the chain of tobacco addiction.
 
For many youth, their first cigarette leads to a lifetime of addiction. With nearly 20 percent of U.S. high school students smoking, keeping tobacco out of the hands of youth can have a huge impact on our nation’s health.
 
Everyone—retailers, teachers, parents, physicians, and public health professionals—plays a role in protecting youth from tobacco.
 
Click here to learn more and take the pedge!
 
 
New Publications Added to Keepitsacred! 
 
Preventing Tobacco Use Among Youth and Young Adults: A Report of the Surgeon General, 2012 
 
 
We have added the policy brief: Policy Brief: A Need for Future American Indian Commercial Tobacco Prevention and Cessation Programs to our publications section.
 
 
Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan Produce Third Hand Smoke Brochure!
 
The Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan have produced a new brochure entitled: Clean Air & Good Health Your Family Deserves a Smoke-Free Home. It deals with third-hand smoke. 
 
For more information and/or to download click here
 
 
New Content at Keepitsacred!
 
Native Fusion: Mobilizing a Community as a Whole webinar presentation
 
We have added two new links to our important links section. 
We have added a link to Asema gikinoo-amaagewin, and the Center for Public Health Systems Science. Click here to learn more.
 
(SMARTalk)HUD Toolkits on smokefree multi-unit housing
On Tuesday June 19th, the American Lung Association along with U.S. Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Assistant Secretary for the Office of Public and Indian Housing Sandra Henriquez, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Assistant Secretary for Health Dr. Howard K. Koh and the American Academy of Pediatrics participated in a press conference to release two new toolkits to help public housing authorities make their multi-family properties smokefree. 
 
Click here to learn more
 
 
 
In this combo made from file images provided by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration shows two of nine new warning labels cigarette makers were to use by the fall of 2012.  (Credit: AP Photo/U.S. Food and Drug Administration, File)
 
Study: Graphic tobacco warning labels more effective at delivering anti-smoking message
 
(CBS News) Graphic warning labels on cigarette packs are used throughout the world to deter people from smoking by using stark images of blackened lungs or diseased individuals along with warnings of tobacco's health effects.
 
A new study finds that the labels actually work, and are more effective at teaching smokers the health risks from cigarette smoking than traditional warnings.
 
Click here to learn more
 
 
The Cherokee Nation Healthy Nation program has put out a wonderful flyer about keeping tobacco sacred
 
 
 
Guest column:
Finally free of tobacco and screaming it from rooftops
By Fernando Leonhardt 
 
 
 
 
 
I am free of tobacco!
For a long time I have wanted to scream this, but it has taken at least five attempts to finally achieve success.
 
As a Latin American, I know it is much easier to achieve addiction. Statistically it is proven that Latinos smoke more, and I unfortunately fell into these statistics.
My intention with this column is to relate my experience as a smoker in hopes my story may help other people quit smoking — or, better yet, never start.
I had my first cigarette at age 19. I did it only as an experiment to find out what it felt like. I figured it would be just an experience. But that experiment led to habit that has take 20 years to kick.
The person who has never smoked does not know what this is, what is enslaving about tobacco, and how hard it is to walk away from it.
My advice to young adolescents is don’t try tobacco even once! Sampling a single cigarette is a risk that should never be taken. The age when you start smoking is generally between 13 and 23 years old, then from there the likelihood that a person becomes a smoker falls significantly. It is around this age when parents and teachers should advise, teach and persuade the young not only to avoid long-term smoking, but to not trick themselves into thinking they can have “just one.”
I tried to stop four times, and it wasn’t until the fifth time I had success — or I think I did — because smoking is very insidious and persistent. It does not leave your mind at peace. It talks and whispers to you constantly to return.
They say it’s best to quit through pure force of will, but for me the way to quit was through motivation. Willpower does not work without motivation. Sooner or later the person will return to smoking. You have to find something that motivates you so you can vigorously alter your routine.
For tobacco users, it’s frustrating to hear family and friends constantly insisting they stop smoking. It’s useless. That pressure only makes things worse and creates a bad mood in the smoker. The way to kick tobacco, in my opinion, is through a conscious, self-motivated decision by the smoker. They must make a plan, choose a quit-smoking aid, set a time to begin, prepare plans for changes in routine, keep in mind activities to do when smoking cravings come, and get motivated by new activities.
In my early attempts to quit, I used the nicotine patch, but it did not work. The last time I used a new drug, Chantix, and it proved successful in my case. Anxiety was cut in half and the urges to smoke were weaker.
Now I feel I’m out of cigarettes, and I have decided to help those who want to quit, to encourage young people to never try it. The cigarette is a death trap. In my three businesses, I am now working with the state health department on developing a smoking policy and also will provide information to people who decide to quit smoking about where they should call and ask for help.
Many people say smokers should quit in order to save money, but the truth is that the smoker does not care about saving money — this habit is stronger than financial concerns.
In my case, I decided to quit for my health and my children. I have three beautiful children, and I want to see them when they are adults.
Because of how hard it is, I see quitting smoking as a heroic act, and now I feel like a hero to my children.
I’d like to thank my family for helping me quit and I give a heartfelt message to youth not to even dare experiment with this addictive substance, because it is a trap. Do not smoke so you can achieve a long and healthy life.
For smokers who think about quitting, you must know it is possible. You have to have a plan, seek help, find the motivation and become the hero of your children as I have.
I hope this column will inspire some smokers to make the decision to quit forever. Life is worth living.
Youth, be smart!
Smoker, you can quit!
——————————————
Fernando Leonhardt is the owner of the La Ranchera and La Rancherita markets in Logan. He is an immigrant from Argentina.
 
 
 
Curbing pregnant smokers with price hikes
 
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (WIAT)-
Around 23% of women enter pregnancy as smokers, and more than half continue to smoke during pregnancy despite the health risks to the baby, excess healthcare costs at delivery and in the future.  Now, a new study shows tobacco control policies can curb this habit in pregnant smokers in addition to preventing a return to smoking within four months, on average, after delivery.
 
Click here to learn more