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Massachusetts Medical Society Announces Call for Entries for its 10th Annual Anti-Tobacco Poster Contest for Grade School Children
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            Nov 26, 2004 19:28 IST  
State association of physicians marks 10 years of anti-smoking efforts with grade.....

The Massachusetts Medical Society and its Alliance have announced a call for entries for its 2005 Anti-Tobacco Poster Contest, a statewide program designed to make young people aware of the dangers of tobacco and smoking.
   
The 2005 program marks the tenth year the Medical Society has conducted its anti-tobacco contest, open to youngsters in grades 1 through 6 throughout Massachusetts.
“Physicians of the Medical Society are proud to count a decade of tobacco prevention efforts for young people with this contest,” said Alan C. Woodward, M.D., president of the Massachusetts Medical Society and Chief of Emergency Services at Emerson Hospital in Concord.


“Public health prevention programs of all kinds have been slashed in our state,” he said, and funding for tobacco prevention efforts has essentially evaporated, so private efforts to prevent smoking become critically important. We need to reach out to youngsters continually to persuade them to avoid the tobacco habit.”
   
Woodward cited statistics from the national Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids that called attention to the rapidly declining funding levels for anti-tobacco efforts across the nation and here in Massachusetts, despite the 1998 landmark settlement of $246 billion with tobacco companies.

Figures from the Campaign show that spending on tobacco prevention efforts in Massachusetts has been cut from $48 million in fiscal year 2002 to only $2.5 million in fiscal year 2004. Massachusetts has dropped from first in the country to 40th in its efforts to protect children from the dangers of smoking.
   
“Despite having one of the nation’s oldest and most successful tobacco prevention program,” said the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, “Massachusetts has seen funding for the Massachusetts Tobacco Control Program cut by 95 percent in the past two years.”
   
To enter the competition, students are asked to create an original poster that ties in with certain themes for their grade. The themes by grades are Grades 1 and 2: Tobacco is bad for your body; Grades 3 and 4: Tobacco affects other people; Grades 5 and 6: Why I won’t start smoking
   
Posters should be 8½ by 11 inches in size, positioned horizontally, on white paper. Entrants should print their name, grade, school, address, telephone, and doctor’s name and town on the back of the poster. Students may give the entry to their teacher or doctor to submit, or they may send it directly to Anti-Tobacco Poster Contest, Massachusetts Medical Society, 860 Winter Street, Waltham, Mass. 02451.

The deadline for submissions is Friday, February 25, 2005.   
   
Each poster will be judged on its originality, artistic value, and how well it relates to the theme. Four winning entries are selected in each grade category, and each winner will be honored at a State House Luncheon with legislators, a $50 gift certificate and recognition by the Medical Society on its website and in other printed materials. In previous years, the Society has published a full-color calendar with the winning entries.
   
For more details about the contest, including additional resources about smoking and tobacco, visit the Society’s website at www.massmed.org/pages/antitobacco_contest.asp. Directions and entry forms may be downloaded from that site as well.

The Massachusetts Medical Society, with more than 18,000 physicians and student members, is dedicated to educating and advocating for the physicians and patients of Massachusetts. Founded in 1781, the MMS is the oldest continuously operating medical society in the country. The Society owns and publishes The New England Journal of Medicine, the Journal Watch family of professional newsletters, and AIDS Clinical Care, and produces HealthNews, a consumer health publication. For more information, visit www.massmed.org
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