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A grandson of cigarette company founder RJ Reynolds, Patrick first spoke out publicly at a Congressional hearing in favor of a ban on all tobacco advertising (1986). Former US Surgeon General C. Everett Koop said in 2003, "Patrick Reynolds is one of the nation's most influential advocates of a smokefree America. His testimony is invaluable to our society." In March, 2009, Mr. Reynolds met in Washington DC with Congressman Henry Waxman to offer his support for the pending bill for FDA regulation of tobacco. Obama later signed the bill into law. In April, 2009, Mr. Reynolds was invited by Greece’s Health Minister Avramopoulos to Athens, where he helped call national public attention to the problem of tobacco use. Because of his success in Greece, Mr. Reynolds' Foundation is now contacting Health Ministers in nations where smoking rates are high. He hopes to visit Russia, China, and India to do the same in those and other nations. The Greek Health Ministry has provided him with a letter of recommendation to Ministers of Health. In the US, Patrick Reynolds is a frequent speaker to youth at schools, presenting his unique motivational talk, The Truth About Tobacco with passion and authenticity. He is also a popular guest lecturer on university campuses, giving his talk Tobacco Wars. Over Mr. Reynolds has also called for governors and State legislators to increase or maintain tobacco prevention spending. He points out, "Studies have proven that States with well funded tobacco prevention programs have significantly lower rates of teen smoking, while States with poorly funded programs have far higher levels of youth smoking. In short, these programs work and should be funded." (To check your state's current spending on smoking prevention programs, please see www.tobaccofreekids.org/reports/settlements. For your State's most recent overall tobacco report card, see StateofTobaccoControl.org.) Little, Brown published The Gilded Leaf in 1989, a colorful family biography of the Reynolds family which Patrick coauthored with critically acclaimed biographer Tom Shachtman. The book spans three generations of the RJ Reynolds family and fortune. In 1988, the UN's World Health Organization honored him with a special award. In 1989, Chicago's Mt. Sinai Hospital awarded him its Humanitarian of the Year award. He is married and lives in Los Angeles with his wife and son.
Resources For journalists who want a side-box of tobacco facts, we suggest using your State's most recent tobacco report card from the American Lung Association, at StateofTobaccoControl.org. Another group provides your State's current spending on smoking prevention programs and the “Toll of tobacco” in your State at www.tobaccofreekids.org/reports/settlements High-resolution photos and video are downloadable from www.tobaccofree.org/photos Recent cable TV debates at www.tobaccofree.org/tv/
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