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Campus Life

HPU HOSTS EVENT ON CAMPUS FOR 'TAKE DOWN TOBACCO DAY'

Written By Gregory Fischbach

March 25, 2024
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  • HPU's public health program hosted 'Take Down Tobacco Day,' a community engagement event on March 21, at Aloha Tower Marketplace

    HPU's public health program hosted 'Take Down Tobacco Day,' a community engagement event on March 21, at Aloha Tower Marketplace.

  •  HPU students had the opportunity to join youths on their march to the Hawai'i State Capitol and speak to legislators about policy priorities

    HPU students had the opportunity to join youths on their march to the Hawai'i State Capitol and speak to legislators about policy priorities.

HPU’s public health program hosted a highly successful “Take Down Tobacco Day” community engagement event on March 21, 2024, at Aloha Tower Marketplace where public health students and HPU Public Health Lecturer Heather Medicine Bear, MPH, engaged in the initiative to help “take action against Big Tobacco.”

The event was in collaboration with the Hawaiʻi Public Health Institute, the Hawaiʻi Tobacco Youth Coalition and the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids. HPU hosted the event and students from public health and the Public Health Student Association participated in the event alongside youth from across the state.

In efforts to increase awareness, advocates have been refreshing banners positioned in front of the Hawai'i State Capitol

In efforts to increase awareness, advocates have been refreshing banners positioned in front of the Hawai'i State Capitol.

Take Down Tobacco Day is a national day of action focused on educating youth about the vaping epidemic and the harms of tobacco use through workshops, presentations, and advocating for policy change. Students had the opportunity to join youths on their march to the Hawaiʻi State Capitol and speak to legislators about policy priorities.

, tobacco consumption stands as the primary contributor to preventable fatalities, claiming the lives of 1,400 individuals annually in Hawai‘i due to tobacco-related ailments. In efforts to increase awareness, young advocates have been refreshing banners positioned in front of the State Capitol and across the state to accurately depict the ongoing toll of these deaths.

To learn more about the HPU public health programs, click here.

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