(Press-News.org) ROCHESTER, Minn. -- Go ye and sin no more -- or pay for it, when it comes to junk food, smoking and consuming alcohol. That's the message from two Mayo Clinic physicians who say raising "sin" taxes on tobacco and alcoholic beverages and imposing them on sugary drinks and fatty foods would lead many people to cut back, improving public health. The article by Michael Joyner, M.D., and David Warner, M.D., appears in the June issue of the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
The physicians contend that much of overall health depends on behavior and is relatively independent of the health care system. Risk factors for many common and chronic diseases are directly linked to tobacco smoking, drinking alcohol, eating too much low-quality food and physical inactivity, they say.
"Sin taxes could address three of these four major behavioral determinants of overall health," says Dr. Joyner, a Mayo Clinic anesthesiologist and physiologist. "Sin taxes have also been highly effective in improving public health in the past and in the current environment could be structured to raise substantial revenue and prevent both medical overuse and chronic diseases."
Key points from the article:
Sin taxes have the potential to generate substantial revenue. Nearly $80 billion could be generated over the next 10 years by increasing the tobacco tax by 50 cents per pack. The alcohol tax as a percentage of the total cost of various forms of alcoholic beverages is much lower than it was in 1980. If the alcohol tax were increased to 30 percent of the pretax value of the beverage (it is currently about 10 percent), federal revenues would increase by $25 billion per year ($250 billion over 10 years). The effects of a 1 cent per ounce tax on sugary beverages would raise approximately $15 billion to $20 billion per year ($150 billion to $200 billion over 10 years).
Ideally, these resources could also be used to subsidize care for the uninsured, buffer the fiscal pressures associated with Medicare and Medicaid, promote increased physical activity and better nutrition in the population, build public health infrastructure or perhaps increase federal funding for biomedical research.
One of the major arguments raised against sin taxes is that they fall disproportionately on the poor, who typically engage in unhealthy behaviors at higher rates than other segments of the population. The authors raise the counterargument that the positive behavioral changes associated with these taxes would disproportionately benefit the poor in terms of both improved health over time and more money to spend on other things.
Sin taxes have bipartisan appeal. Those concerned about disparities in health associated with socioeconomic status and other demographic factors should like them because promotion of healthy behavior may reduce these disparities. They should appeal to those who prefer policies that promote personal responsibility, because such taxes can positively affect individual health behaviors, the physicians say.
"Although consideration of such policies would (and has) engendered vigorous debate, sin taxes have the potential to rapidly benefit the physical, social, and fiscal health of the nation and should be seriously considered by policymakers and our political leaders," Dr. Joyner says.
###
About Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit worldwide leader in medical care, research and education for people from all walks of life. For more information, visit http://www.mayoclinic.com and http://www.mayoclinic.org/news.
Journalists can become a member of the Mayo Clinic News Network for the latest health, science and research news and access to video, audio, text and graphic elements that can be downloaded or embedded.
Nick Hanson
507-284-5005 (days)
507-284-2511 (evenings)
Email: newsbureau@mayo.edu
MULTIMEDIA ALERT: For audio and video of Dr. Joyner talking about sin taxes, visit the Mayo Clinic News Network.
Smoking, sugar, spirits and 'sin' taxes: Higher price would help health, Mayo Clinic doctors say
Physicians call for new tax on sugary drinks, fatty foods; tax hike on tobacco, alcoholic beverages
2013-06-04
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Berkeley Lab researchers unlock mystery behind dormant breast tumor cells that become metastatic
2013-06-04
The long-standing mystery behind dormant disseminated breast tumor cells and what activates them after years and even decades of latency may have been solved. Researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have identified the microenvironment surrounding microvasculature – the small blood vessels that transport blood within tissues – as a niche where dormant cancer cells reside. When these blood vessels begin to sprout, the new tips produce molecules that transform dormant cancer cells into metastatic tumors.
In ...
Rash decision? New UK coins increase nickel skin allergy risk 4 fold
2013-06-04
In a bid to save £10 million a year the British Treasury is replacing copper–nickel five and ten pence coins with new nickel-plated steel versions. However, while no UK health assessment has taken place, scientists in Sweden have analyzed the allergy risk after the Swedish state bank announced it will reduce traces of nickel in Swedish coinage.
The assessment, published in Contact Dermatitis reveals that the UK public's exposure to nickel allergic reactions will increase four fold. The team analyzes skin exposure and metal release in artificial sweat to find that the ...
Large multi-generational family helps unlock genetic secrets to developmental dysplasia of the hip
2013-06-04
(PHILADELPHIA) – Research from Thomas Jefferson University is laying the foundation for a genetic test to accurately identify hip dysplasia in newborns so that early intervention can be initiated to promote normal development. This research from Jefferson Orthopedics physician-scientists is currently available in the Journal of Bone and Mineralizing Research (JBMR) online at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jbmr.1999/abstract.
The researchers studied four generations of a Utah family affected by developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) in most generations. ...
12 million bednets and innovative thinking make Ghana malaria partnership a success
2013-06-04
In a report to be released this month, the Promoting Malaria Prevention and Treatment (ProMPT) Project will describe an innovative model for distributing over 12 million mosquito nets to prevent the transmission of malaria in Ghana.
In collaboration with the Ghana Health Service (GHS), and funding from the US Agency for international Development (USAID), the four year long project ensured that millions of households learned how to use nets treated with insecticide to kill mosquitoes, which can transmit malaria. The $20 million project, funded through the United States ...
American, Nepalese children disagree on social obligations with age
2013-06-04
ITHACA, N.Y. – Preschoolers universally recognize that one's choices are not always free – that our decisions may be constrained by social obligations to be nice to others or follow rules set by parents or elders, even when wanting to do otherwise.
As they age, however, American kids are more prone to acknowledge one's freedom to act against such obligations compared to Nepalese children, who are less willing to say that people can and will violate social codes, finds a cross-cultural study by Cornell University development psychologists published in the current issue ...
Researchers discover a new way fish camouflage themselves in the ocean
2013-06-04
Fish can hide in the open ocean by manipulating how light reflects off their skin, according to researchers at The University of Texas at Austin. The discovery could someday lead to the development of new camouflage materials for use in the ocean, and it overturns 40 years of conventional wisdom about fish camouflage.
The researchers found that lookdown fish camouflage themselves through a complex manipulation of polarized light after it strikes the fishes' skin. In laboratory studies, they showed that this kind of camouflage outperforms by up to 80 percent the "mirror" ...
Tiger moths: Mother Nature's fortune tellers
2013-06-04
(WINSTON-SALEM, NC, June 3, 2013) – When it comes to saving its own hide, the tiger moth can predict the future.
A new study by researchers at Wake Forest University shows Bertholdia trigona, a species of tiger moth found in the Arizona desert, can tell if an echo-locating bat is going to attack it well before the predator swoops in for the kill – making the intuitive, tiny-winged insect a master of self-preservation.
Predators in the night
A bat uses sonar to hunt at night. The small mammal emits a series of ultrasonic cries and listens carefully to the echoes ...
DFG establishes 12 new collaborative research centers
2013-06-04
This news release is available in German.
The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) is to establish 12 new Collaborative Research Centres (CRCs). This was decided by the responsible Grants Committee during its spring session in Bonn. The new CRCs will receive a total of 94 million euros for an initial period of three years and nine months. There will also be a 20% programme allowance for indirect project costs.
The new CRCs cover a wide range of topics, including the sociocultural importance of oil, metals, food and other natural resources ...
New explanation for slow earthquakes on San Andreas
2013-06-04
New Zealand's geologic hazards agency reported this week an ongoing, "silent" earthquake that began in January is still going strong. Though it is releasing the energy equivalent of a 7.0 earthquake, New Zealanders can't feel it because its energy is being released over a long period of time, therefore slow, rather than a few short seconds.
These so-called "slow slip events" are common at subduction zone faults – where an oceanic plate meets a continental plate and dives beneath it. They also occur on continents along strike-slip faults like California's San Andreas, ...
A new species of marine fish from 408 million years ago discovered in Teruel
2013-06-04
Researchers from the University of Valencia and the Natural History Museum of Berlin have studied the fossilised remains of scales and bones found in Teruel and the south of Zaragoza, ascertaining that they belong to a new fish species called Machaeracanthus goujeti that lived in that area of the peninsula during the Devonian period. The fossils are part of the collection housed in the Palaeontology Museum of Zaragoza.
In the journal 'Geodiversitas', a research team led by the University of Valencia describes a new species of spiny shark (Acanthodii), a primitive type ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Taking sports science in her stride: How Dr. Nerea Casal García aims to maximize performance on the track
Pioneering work generates feline embryonic stem cells in boon for cats
Decoding the link between colorectal cancer risk and steatotic liver disease
Controlling conformational changes in protein aromatic side chains
Experimental and numerical analysis of the potential drop method for defects caused by dynamic loads
Chinese researchers make breakthrough in artificial chiral structural-color microdomes
Intermittent fasting inhibits platelet activation to reduce thrombosis risk
A clear game-changer: Curtin’s water-repellent glass breaks new ground
Are our refrigerants safe? The lingering questions about the chemicals keeping us cool
How nitrogen reshapes root system architecture in plants?
‘Fluorescent phoenix’ discovered with persistence rivaling Marie Curie’s
A rapid and reproducible method for generating germ-free Drosophila melanogaster
Aging and the brain’s sugar-coated shield
Better poverty mapping: New machine-learning approach targets aid more effectively
An emissions tale of two cities: Salt Lake City vs. Los Angeles
WVU nursing faculty aim to enhance rural home care for chronically ill through NIH award
New screening tool for stroke survivors with visual perception problems
Influencer marketing can help tourism industry mitigate waste, pollution
Tufts named a top producer of U.S. Fulbright students
Material’s ‘incipient’ property could jumpstart fast, low-power electronics
In preparing children for a racially unequal society, families of colour can benefit from more support, study finds
Student refines 100-year-old math problem, expanding wind energy possibilities
Immunity against seasonal H1N1 flu reduces bird flu severity in ferrets, study suggests
Do starchy carbs cause cavities?
New study supports caution regarding use of steroids
Treatment strategy reprograms brain cancer cells, halting tumor growth
Digital program reduces fall risk and boosts strength in older adults
Why brain cancer is often resistant to immunotherapy
The Obesity Society commends FDA's resolution of obesity drug shortages, calls for enforcement against unauthorized compounding
A new path to recovery: Scientists uncover key brain circuit in the fight against cocaine use disorder
[Press-News.org] Smoking, sugar, spirits and 'sin' taxes: Higher price would help health, Mayo Clinic doctors sayPhysicians call for new tax on sugary drinks, fatty foods; tax hike on tobacco, alcoholic beverages