Time to read
less than1 minute
Asian & Pacific Islander Tobacco Education Network - United States
Initiated in 1990, the Asian and Pacific Islander Tobacco Education Network (APITEN) is a US partnership that promotes wellness while organising individuals and groups to advocate for tobacco-free communities. The group's mission is to address tobacco control using culturally and linguistically appropriate methods that will enable AAPI populations to improve their health status.
Communication Strategies
APITEN engages in the following initiatives:
Health, smoking, tobacco control, youth, education, ethnic communities, policy, media advocacy, community-directed research.
- Countering pro-tobacco influences by:
- Mobilising AAPI organisations to adopt policies eliminating tobacco sponsorship
- Strengthening the capacity of organisations through technical assistance and training (e.g., grant writing, media, and advocacy)
- Collaborating with ethnic networks on statewide activities
- Promoting smoke-free environments by:
- Educating bar owners and patrons on laws, like California Smoke-Free Workplace Law
- Advocating for smoke-free events with outreach and education
- Improving health policy and program support for AAPIs by:
- Conducting policy analysis on effective tobacco control
- Organising educational visits to local, state, and national government officials
- Providing one-time mini-grants of up to US$5,000 to AAPI community-based organisations for tobacco education activities.
Health, smoking, tobacco control, youth, education, ethnic communities, policy, media advocacy, community-directed research.
Key Points
Long-term goals include supporting local short-term activities to lead to long-term health improvement while encouraging under-represented ethnic populations and under-served geographic areas.
Partners
APITEN, Asian Pacific Health Care Venture, California Health Collaborative, Union of Pan Asian Communities.
Sources
APITEN site; Letter sent from Roxanna Ursua Bautista to The Communication Initiative on October 28, 2002.
- Log in to post comments











































