Weekdays at 8:30 a.m. (9 NT)Friday, September 16, 2011 | Categories: Episodes
Part Three of The Current
Freedom of Information on Kids and Smoking
First up, we aired some thoughts from Londoners on why they started smoking as teenagers. And they are the the kinds of opinions the Institute for Social Marketing and the Centre for Tobacco Control Research at the University of Stirling have collected for years.
Thousands of confidential interviews have been conducted with children between the ages of 11 and 16 about their attitudes on smoking and cigarette packaging. It's an impressive collection of data. And guess who would like to see it? Philip Morris, the tobacco company. It's filed a request with Scotland's Freedom of Information office. The company can make the request since part of the University's research is publicly funded.
Gerard Hastings is the Director of the Institute for Social Marketing and the Centre for Tobacco Control Research at the University of Stirling and we reached him in Stirling, Scotland.
Freedom of Information on Kids and Smoking
It's now up to the Scottish Freedom of Information office to determine whether Stirling University must cough up its smoking research to a tobacco company.
Kevin Dunion is the Scottish information commissioner and we reached him in St. Andrew's, Scotland.
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Last Word - Motherhood
Monday on The Current, producer Kathleen Goldhar looks back to a time in Canada when single mothers weren't given much choice in determining the fate of their newborns. On Today's last word, she talks about how well-meaning social workers and doctors nevertheless caused heartache that's endured for half a century.
Other segments from today's show: