Health Umpires Want Smokeless Tobacco Tossed out of Major Leagues

Timing their pitch to coincide with today’s opening day of the new baseball season, public health officials from 15 cities have called on Major League Baseball and the players’ union to rid the game of smokeless tobacco products.

“The use of smokeless tobacco endangers the health of Major League ballplayers and sets a terrible example for the millions of young people who watch baseball at the ballparks and on TV,” the health officials wrote in a letter to Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig and Michael Weiner, executive director of the players’ union.

The minor leagues, the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the National Hockey League have outlawed smokeless tobacco but Major League Baseball, where the sight of ballplayers chewing on tobacco is common, has so far resisted following that example. With labor negotiations under way on the major leagues’ collective bargaining agreement, two U.S. senators have been pressing MLB to include a smokeless tobacco ban in the new contract.

“We ask you to seize this moment to protect players and stop creating images that associate tobacco use with masculinity and athleticism — when in fact it is associated with disease and death,” the health officials’ letter concludes.

As the Los Angeles Times reported, smokeless tobacco causes oral cancer and pancreatic cancer, and has been linked with other cancers. The products also contribute to heart disease, gum disease and other problems.

The story notes that Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn, the former San Diego Padres star, was diagnosed last summer with cancer of the parotid gland, a salivary gland on the jawline, that he has blamed on his longtime habit of using smokeless tobacco.

According to the federal government’s National Youth Risk Behavior Survey, the use of smokeless tobacco has increased by 36 percent among high school boys since 2003, with more than one out of seven now using the products. “We know that young fans and youth players look up to big leaguers,” said the health chiefs, all of whom come from metropolitan areas with major league teams.

Related Post:
Senators Urge Major League Baseball to Throw Out Smokeless Tobacco

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