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NCADD News Release
For More Information, Contact:
Jeffrey Hon, Director for Public Information
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For Immediate Release:
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Betty Ford Joins NCADD in Call for Educational "Counter Advertising" Measures
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Former First Lady Betty Ford has joined NCADD in urging support for
"counter advertising" measures that would educate the public about
the health and safety risks associated with drinking alcohol, the
third leading cause of preventable death in America.
"I am saddened that the distilled spirits industry has decided to
advertise on television," said Mrs. Ford in a written statement. "This advertising, along with commercials for beer and wine, glamorizes
drinking for adolescents and young adults, associating it with success,
sophistication, athletic ability and sex. That's why I support the NCADD in its call for counter advertising."
"The announcement in November that the Distilled Spirits Council of the
United States (DISCUS) would lift its voluntary ban on using radio and
television to make distilled spirits more appealing to consumers means
that the American public--especially our young people and the millions
of men and women who already suffer from the disease of alcoholism--will
be subjected to a new wave of commercials that will glamorize drinking
and make alcoholic beverages of all kinds virtually indistinguishable
from soft drinks," said NCADD president Paul Wood, PhD, in letters to
President Clinton, Congressional leaders and Reed Hundt, Chairman of
the Federal Communications Commission. "It's time that we used mass
market advertising techniques in combination with the most powerful
media at our disposal to inform people that, when not taken in
moderation, any alcoholic beverage--whether it be beer, wine, gin,
vodka, scotch, or anything else containing the drug ethanol--can have
a serious downside that affects both drinkers and non-drinkers alike."
"While the broadcast television networks are to be commended for their
decision not to accept commercials for distilled spirits, in reality,
Americans, who get most of their information about alcohol through
advertising, have a right to know more about alcoholic beverages, not
less," continued McGovern. "This includes the fact that standard
servings of beer, wine and 80 proof distilled spirits all contain the
same amount of alcohol and that any one of them--when not used in
moderation--can destroy human life."
With more than half of the nation's students in grades 5 to 12 saying
that alcoholic beverage advertising encourages them to drink--and with
more than 25% of 8th graders reporting that they have used alcohol in
the past month--NCADD has long been a vocal critic of beer and wine
commercials that target youth. The organization renewed its call for
counter advertising measures after Seagram Americas and now DISCUS
ignored repeated appeals by President Clinton, Senate Majority Leader
Trent Lott (R-MS), Chairman Hundt, NCADD and dozens of other
organizations to behave responsibly and maintain a voluntary ban that
has kept so-called "hard liquor" ads off radio since 1936 and off
television since 1948. The voluntary ban has been accompanied by a 29%
decline in distilled spirits consumption since 1980. During the same
period consumption of beer--the alcoholic beverage most heavily
advertised on radio and television, and the alcoholic beverage most
used by people convicted of driving while intoxicated--has increased
more than four per cent.
Counter advertising campaigns to prevent smoking-related health problems
in California and in Massachusetts have proven to be an effective means
of reducing tobacco use. Rather than rely on the limited availability
of traditional public service advertising for which the media donates
space and time, these states increased excise taxes on cigarette sales
by 25 cents per pack and designated a portion of the income to fund
counter advertising campaigns. Early research indicates that smoking
rates fell more significantly in these states than in those without
similar programs.
11/96
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National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc.
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244 East 58th Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10022
phone: 212/269-7797 fax: 212/269-7510
email: national@ncadd.org http://www.ncadd.org
HOPE LINE: 800/NCA-CALL (24-hour Affiliate referral)
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