Pam Laffin's story. Here is one TV spot. Pam died on october 31, 2000.
An interview (pdf format)
The campaign explained by Greg Connolly (Massachusetts Department of Health).
From Breathing Lessons
Laffin began smoking at age 10 in the basement of her childhood home near Boston. "Did you ever see the movie Grease?" she once asked an interviewer. "I made my mother take me to get a perm so I could have curly hair like Sandy's. It seemed like most of the people in her new school didn't accept her, and she started smoking and then she was friends with everybody. So I thought maybe, if I smoked, I could be like her."
When she was 21, Laffin developed chronic bronchitis. She came down with the condition four times that year, and began to suffer from bronchial asthma as well. When she was 23, Laffin was diagnosed with chronic asthma; the following year, with emphysema. If she continued to smoke, Laffin's physician told her, she'd be dead before she was 30. "When I'm 30," she remembered thinking, "my older daughter will be 13. That's about the time kids need their parents the most. I made the decision that I wouldn't smoke anymore."
Laffin did quit. Unfortunately, it was too late. She underwent a lung transplant a year later, but her body rejected the donor organ. Too frail to withstand another surgery right away, she underwent pulmonary rehab and hoped she'd get well enough to make the waiting list for another lung.
During this period Laffin was in constant pain and dependent on family members for her care. Simply breathing was backbreaking, exhausting work. This might be about the time that some people would throw in the towel. Pam Laffin decided to use the time she had left to warn every kid she could to not make the mistake she'd made. Despite being confined to a wheelchair and suffering relentlessly, Laffin embarked on an anti-smoking crusade that proved nothing short of heroic.
Over the next few years she traveled throughout Massachusetts and to several other states. She told her story at schools, visited youth organizations and spoke to addicts trying to quit. She talked bluntly about what smoking had done to her life, and asked the young people in her audiences to consider what it could do to theirs.
Laffin found the largest audience of her life when the Massachusetts Department of Public Health recruited her for a series of TV commercials in the mid-'90s. In these spots she displayed her trademark naked honesty. She allowed a crew to film her bronchoscopy. She revealed the scars that surgery had left across her back. She looked into the camera and spoke about the ways in which her body had been deformed, how emphysema had left her with "a fat face" and "a lump on my neck." Laffin also displayed a sense of humor. At the close of one spot she noted ironically, "I started smoking to look older. I'm sorry to say, it worked."
The ads had an immediate impact. The number of calls into the state's "try to stop" hotline skyrocketed, many of them from young people. MTV and PBS both made documentaries about Laffin's life and message. She appeared on national programs such as "Good Morning America." Laffin became the country's most prominent and influential anti-smoking activist. Ultimately the U.S. Centers for Disease Control caught on and produced a 20-minute educational video chronicling her experience. "I Can't Breathe" was designed to spark classroom discussion among 11- to 14-year-olds concerning the perils of smoking.
The spots in which Pam Laffin appears today incorporate footage from the television PSAs and the CDC video. This explains why Krystell speaks about her as though she were still alive. Laffin reportedly had particularly strong emotions about her daughter's part in the campaign. She told a reporter at the time, "What I've been doing for the past four years or so has been aimed at kids. And this is aimed at adults. Look at my daughter who I hurt deeply... Maybe a mother can look at my life and say, 'This could be me. This could be my child.'"
Laffin died on October 31, 2000, at the age of 31 -- just three weeks before a scheduled second lung transplant. She has been honored by numerous organizations, including the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, which posthumously gave her its "Champion Award." Laffin went far in that wheelchair.
A website provided on the current ads in turn offers a link to the CDC's site, where viewers can learn more about Pam Laffin and order a copy of "I Can't Breathe." Except you can't -- get the video, that is; the title is "Currently Not Available for Order." Once again, something didn't seem quite right, so I emailed the CDC asking why the video isn't available. Here in part is the response I received: "Thank you for your interest in our products. The video 'I Can't Breathe' was a very popular item and is out of stock. We do not know at this time if [we] will receive additional copies of this item in 2005..."
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