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Walgreens Raising Minimum Tobacco Sales Age to 21 After FDA Pressure

Walgreens has risen the minimum age to buy tobacco to 21 years old after it received criticism from the FDA earlier this year for selling tobacco products to mi...
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Walgreens has risen the minimum age to buy tobacco to 21 years old after it received criticism from the FDA earlier this year for selling tobacco products to minors.

The policy will be implemented chain-wide starting Sept. 1, the drug store company announced Tuesday in a press release, calling the change "the most recent step in an ongoing effort to further prevent youth access to tobacco products."

In early April, Illinois joined the ranks of a number of US states who have raised the age for legal sales to 21; others who have passed such laws include Washington, Hawaii, California, New Jersey, Oregon, Maine, Massachusetts, Arkansas and Virginia.

Matthew Myers, the president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, said Walgreens' move was nothing more than a recognition of the growing trend toward limiting sales. He chastised the company, saying "Walgreens shouldn't be selling tobacco products, period."

A top competitor, CVS, banned all tobacco sales in 2014, saying the sales "conflicted with our purpose of helping people on their path to better health."

"Walgreens should recognize that there is a fundamental conflict between their mission as a health care provider and the sale of tobacco products, which are the number one cause of preventable death," Myers said in a statement.

The US Food and Drug Administration had recently cracked down on Walgreens and other retailers for selling tobacco products to minors. In early March, the agency called for a meeting with Walgreens after announcing that the pharmacy giant sells tobacco to more minors than any other pharmacy chain.

The FDA said its inspectors found nearly 1,800 cases since 2010 in which Walgreens stores violated the law and illegally sold tobacco products to minors; 22% of the more than 6,000 inspected stores had made illegal sales, the FDA said.

"These illegal sales must stop," then-Commissioner Scott Gottlieb wrote in a letter to Walgreens President of Operations Richard Ashworth. "The stakes are too high for our young people and our country's decades-long fight to reduce the morbidity and mortality that accompanies tobacco product use."

Walgreens began a "Card All" policy in October that requires verification of all sales of tobacco, regardless of age.

In Tuesday's announcement, Ashworth said, "We've seen positive results from other recent efforts to strengthen our policies related to tobacco sales, and believe this next step can be even more impactful to reduce its use among teens and young adults."

Ashworth said the company will also train and certify pharmacists and technicians to help people quit tobacco and will promote tobacco-cessation products and services, along with "a comprehensive suite of digital information and support tools to patients who want to quit smoking."

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