On
a cool, damp afternoon in Flushing, Queens, Seung Jun stood outside on Main
Street on Thursday, a smoker among his peers. He unsheathed a Parliament and
took a long drag, as though he were taking in a breath of relief.
All around him, other Asian men engaged in the
same ritual, on the sidewalks, in doorways and on bicycles. Here, in the heart
of the city’s largest Asian community, smoking is still a way of life.
The city’s Asian population has been
stubbornly resistant to the otherwise successful efforts by the Bloomberg
administration to curb smoking among New Yorkers. Smoking rates among the
city’s Asian communities have not budged since 2002 — most notably among Asian
men, despite decreases in the habit among almost every other demographic,
according to data from the city’s health department.
On Thursday, the department stepped up its
appeals to Asian smokers, introducing graphic ads in Chinese for its annual
campaign to distribute nicotine patches and gum, and offering Chinese speakers
for those who call 311 to enroll in the program. The department will also seed
the ethnic news media with translated versions of its antismoking campaign
called “Pain,” which depicts excruciating smoking-related cancers.
“We looked at our data very carefully to
understand who is still smoking in New York City,” said Jenna Mandel-Ricci, a
deputy director at the Bureau of Chronic Disease Prevention and Tobacco
Control. She added that the city’s Russian community, about a quarter of whom
smoke, would be given the same kind of attention.
Part of the problem is rooted in homeland:
Nearly 70 percent of men in both China and South Korea smoke, for example,
according to the World Health Organization (for women in both countries the
number is below 10 percent). In New York City, the numbers are far lower: about
17 percent of Asian men smoke, and under 5 percent of women, according to the
health department.
But unlike most other demographic groups in
the city, Asian men smoke at a rate that did not show a statistically
significant drop from 2002 to 2010. Among blacks, for example, the rate fell to
12.5 percent from 20.8 percent. And among whites, it dropped to 15.6 percent
from 23.8 percent.
Among Asians, there are “persistent cultural
norms around smoking that the city’s policies and programs have not really
penetrated,” said Dr. Donna Shelley, an associate professor at the New York
University School of Medicine, who has studied smoking in the city’s Asian
communities. For example, gifts of cigarettes at a holiday gathering, where
other groups might give, say, a bottle of Malbec, are routine, Dr. Shelley
found.
“It’s a largely accepted part of our culture,”
says Grace Meng, a Queens assemblywoman who is Chinese-American and represents
Flushing. She says she is shocked when people think nothing of lighting up over
a business dinner.
While the trend is citywide, Flushing, with
one of the highest concentrations of Asians in the five boroughs, seems to
encapsulate the different dimensions of the problem.
On Thursday, Chinh Vu, 60, who moved here from
Vietnam three decades ago, was feeding his pack-a-day habit with a fresh
Dunhill cigarette outside of CJ Food Market on Main Street. All his peers
smoke, he said, but not his children and grandchildren. “Over here they don’t
smoke, they go to school, they learn something and they don’t smoke,” he said.
“Good for them. It’s not good for me, but I can’t stop.”
The problem is less prevalent among Asian
women. In most Asian countries, less than 10 percent of women smoke, and even
fewer smoke in New York. However, some researchers say that smoking among young
Asian-American girls seems to be rising, as they seek to keep up with their
peer group, who often view smoking as hip.
“I felt that we have failed in our educational
process of teaching adults,” said State Senator Toby Ann Stavisky, whose
district encompasses Flushing. The key, she said, is teaching children of immigrants
the dangers of smoking, so they take that information back home. “Their parents
will pick up from the children,” she said.
But while children may adopt the typical New
Yorker’s disdain for smoke, a culture of deference to elders that threads
through many Asian groups is another potential roadblock, Dr. Shelley said.
Correcting an older person’s behavior may be seen as disrespectful, not
helpful.
Patrick Lee, 22, who is Chinese and smokes
though his family disapproves, agreed. “I’m not going to tell my grandpa what
to do,” he said. “He’s older than me so, if you want to smoke, go ahead and
smoke.”
Mr. Lee’s friends keep each other supplied in
cheap cigarettes, ordered in bulk from Taiwan or picked up in duty-free shops
when they go back and forth to their home countries, he said. A block away, a
smoker pulled out a bright red pack of Chunghwa cigarettes from China. One side
it was emblazoned in Chinese, the other in English: “Quit smoking early is good
for your health.”
As Mr. Jun, 22, a paralegal at a law firm in
Flushing, tossed his butt to the curb, he offered another theory of why many in
his densely populated community find cigarettes so hard to give up. “We
struggle,” he said. “So we smoke.”
SARAH MASLIN NIR
The New York Times
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