The National Tobacco-Free College Campus Initiative: Building and Supporting Community Health on Campus ACHA, May 29, 2013 Jenny Haubenreiser, Montana.

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Presentation transcript:

The National Tobacco-Free College Campus Initiative: Building and Supporting Community Health on Campus ACHA, May 29, 2013 Jenny Haubenreiser, Montana State University Cliff Douglas, JD, University of Michigan Dr. Michael Fiore, University of Wisconsin

Collegiate tobacco-free policies Consider: between 1 - 2 million current college students are expected to die prematurely from tobacco use. Imperative behind collegiate tobacco-free policies Moving beyond the academic mission and retention Taking the long-view of heath Community health approach, to include faculty and staff Students as future leaders, employability Understanding the collegiate tobacco user The “social smoker” Intention to quit when they graduate Smokeless products and poly-use

Collegiate tobacco-free policies ACHA leadership and partnership in the TFCCI Partnership among OASH, Univ. of Michigan and ACHA Value of the TFCCI Provision of tools, resources and networks to support campus professionals Increases readiness for campuses nationally and regionally Ensuring a standard for “tobacco-free” Smoke-free versus tobacco-free Why tobacco-free?

Collegiate tobacco-free policies Snap-shot of a campus implementation strategy Articulating the value of health on campus Role of student engagement, key allies Necessity of strategic collaboration at all levels and stages of implementation Tobacco policies exemplifying the art and science of health promotion Data and research alone will not get the job done Flexibility and readiness for both opportunities and setbacks Ongoing vigilance post-implementation: fostering a culture of compliance