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LGBT Tobacco Education Partnership: The
CLASH between Tobacco and LGBT Lives
by Ken Ludden for the San
Francisco Spectrum
The LGBT Community has faced many foes along the road to equality,
and though many queers are health conscious, more of us die from
tobacco related disease than the mainstream public. In fact, tobacco
causes more deaths in the LGBT community than HIV/AIDS, drug use,
alcohol and other factors. In 1991 the quest to educate began with
the formation of CLASH (the Coalition of Lavender Americans on Smoking
and Health). This first group to address the education gap on tobacco
served two purposes: 1) to inform people in the LGBT Community that
tobacco killed more people than other factors presumed far more
lethal, and 2) to inform California’s tobacco education community
about the increased statistical vulnerability LGBT people had to
potential harm from tobacco products.
The formation of CLASH was a direct result of the eagerness of
the tobacco industry to advertise to the LGBT community, demonstrated
in 1992 by the first advertisement in Genre magazine. The tobacco
industry was not shy at all of crafting advertisements specifically
designed to lure more LGBT people into addiction and death.
California had an effective and powerful education program, as
it does today, but in 1991 they didn’t know much about the
LGBT community. About twelve years ago, the State of California
created groups called Ethnic Networks that were used to distribute
education programs. At that time these Networks included (in the
terminology of that time) American Indian, Asian American/Pacific
islander, African-American, and Hispanic/Latino. Missing were LGBT
people, and CLASH, along with other allies, started to advocate
to have LGBT visibility in the tobacco education movement. A small,
grass-roots nonprofit, CLASH members began supporting each other
and exchanging important information.
CLASH efforts began to have success, and the State changed the
title from Ethnic Networks to Priority Populations. There are now
seven Priority Populations adding LGBT, Low SES (low socio-economic
status), and Building and Construction Trades. These three new groups,
along with the original four groups, smoke tobacco products at higher
than average levels in California. Due to this dubious distinction,
the tobacco industry has specifically targeted these groups. And,
as Bob Gordon, an original member of CLASH, says with dark humor,
“As LGBT people we’re over-achievers when it comes to
tobacco use.”
Until this year, CLASH did not have an office. Their work was conducted
in spaces borrowed from people’s private lives, on time borrowed
from the busy schedules of active people. Then in February, 2004
a grant was offered for LGBT Tobacco Education by the California
Department of Health Services, Tobacco Control Section (CDHS/TCS),
and Bob Gordon applied for it. “I applied for it,” Gordon
says, “with support from CLASH, and support from American
Cancer society, and moral support from so many other organizations
(Lung Association, Heart Association, etc) all who wanted to see
the LGBT community have a chance to counteract the tobacco industry
and be funded to do that.” As a result of winning that grant,
CLASH is now able to take up residence in the LGBT Community Center.
CLASH is the latest in a list of major organizations that have
moved into the Center. In considering the Center as a potential
home, Gordon and others in CLASH knew they would be in compatible
territory. The San Francisco LGBT Pride Committee, who have also
just moved in, and the Center itself have both written policies
to refuse any funding and donations from the tobacco industry. Assembly
Member Mark Leno presented awards to the two groups for having taken
the courageous step.
“We are thrilled to support the center with our rent check
every month,” says Gordon, “and to be part of the Center
family, which now includes SF Pride, GGBA, and all of the great
programs that happen at the center.” Equally thrilled will
be the many community members who will now be able to easily attend
programs provided by CLASH, like Technical Assistance Programs to
County Health Agencies, LGBT communities who desire to be smoke-free
and are aided by County Health Agencies, the California Smokers’
Help Line (1-800-NO BUTTS), free quit-smoking seminars offered at
the Center four times a year, and both MTF and FTM transgender individuals
who will benefit from assistance by CLASH as information is spread
at the increased risk those populations face.
In addition to the training programs being developed by CLASH and
successful training of health care workers in dealing with the LGBT
community, other organizations are able to use many of the training
models as well. But one of the more practical and peripherally life-saving
services offered by CLASH is in the form of a short booklet called
Ethical Funding, which informs about the ethics of tobacco, alcohol
and pharmaceutical funding, a practical guide for LGBT organizations.
The booklet, which is available for free from the CLASH address
below or for $3 per copy from the Tobacco Education Clearing House
of California, will help organizations understand the pros and cons,
far-reaching implications and direct impacts of accepting such funding.
This is no small dilemma for non-profit organizations and small
businesses in today’s failing economy. The tobacco industry
has hundreds of millions of dollars to give at a time when many
businesses are being forced to close their doors due to financial
hardship. Every time one of these businesses fails some individual,
neighborhood, community or constituency group loses resources and
services.
“Personally I would love it if people would not do business
with the people who are addicting us and killing us,” says
Gordon, “but would wish that if they do make that decision
they would educate themselves before they become allied with that
industry. I believe it’s a dilemma for organizations who need
funding in a time where funding is scarce. That is why we developed
this guide to help people sort through this dilemma.”
Just as the California tobacco education programs did not include
the LGBT community in the early 1990s, today the transgender populations
are similarly disenfranchised. CLASH is stepping up to the plate
on their behalf as they did for the entire LGBT community twelve
years ago. “We should be able to say who we are, feel comfortable
with it and receive equal services regardless of our sexual orientation
or our gender identity,” Gordon says with conviction. “Preliminary
research is showing that transgender women may face complications
such as blood clots if they are undergoing hormone therapy, and
transgender men who are using testosterone can be at an increased
risk of heart attack and stroke, while they are smoking.”
CLASH firmly believes that transgender people deserve equal access
to this research and these services. And this is often called Overcoming
Health Disparity that people may not have equal access to information
about what happens to their bodies while smoking because the research
has not been done. “We want to help everybody in our community
be as healthy as possible, we want to help them.”
For more information, visit the CLASH offices at the LGBT Community
Center. And to receive the free brochure mentioned above or other
materials, please contact Bob Gordon, California LGBT Tobacco Education
Partnership (LGBT Partnership), 1800 Market Street, #4, SF, CA 94102,
415-436-9182, email: bob@lgbtpartnership.org
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