WASHINGTON,
DC – An insidious new generation
of tobacco products is threatening
efforts to reduce tobacco use in the
United States,
warns a new report issued today by a
coalition of public health
organizations.
The report describes how tobacco
manufacturers take advantage of the
lack of government regulation to
design and market products that
recruit new youth users, create and
sustain addiction to nicotine, and
discourage current users from
quitting. Responding to declining
smoking rates and growing
restrictions on smoking, tobacco
manufacturers are finding novel ways
to entice new users, especially
children, and discourage quitting.
To stop the tobacco industry’s
harmful practices and protect public
health, leading public health
organizations urge Congress to pass
pending legislation granting the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) authority to regulate tobacco
products and their marketing.
The report, “Big Tobacco’s Guinea
Pigs: How an Unregulated Industry
Experiments on America’s Kids and
Consumers,” was issued by the
American Cancer Society Cancer
Action Network, American Heart
Association, American Lung
Association and Campaign for
Tobacco-Free Kids, with funding by
the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
The report details key trends
including:
Flavored products:
Cigarettes, smokeless tobacco and cigars have
been introduced in an array of
candy, fruit and alcohol flavors.
R.J. Reynolds’ Camel cigarettes, for
example, have come in more than a
dozen flavors, including lime,
coconut and pineapple, toffee, and
mint. Flavorings mask the harshness
of the products and make them
appealing to children.
Novel smokeless products:
New smokeless tobacco products have been
marketed as ways to help smokers
sustain their addiction in the
growing number of places where they
cannot smoke. In addition to
traditional chewing and spit
tobacco, smokeless tobacco now comes
in teabag-like pouches and even in
dissolvable, candy-like tablets.
Targeted products and marketing:
New products and marketing have been
aimed at women, girls and other
populations. The most recent example
is R.J. Reynolds’ Camel No. 9
cigarettes, a pink-hued version that
one newspaper dubbed “Barbie Camel”
because of marketing that appealed
to girls.
Unproven health claims:
A growing list of products have been marketed
with unproven and misleading claims
that they are less harmful than
traditional cigarettes. Claims have
included “All of the taste… Less of
the toxin” (Brown & Williamson’s
Advance cigarettes) and “Reduced
carcinogens. Premium taste” (Vector
Tobacco’s Omni Cigarettes).
Undisclosed product designs:
The report also illustrates how tobacco
manufacturers control nicotine
delivery to maximize addiction,
while using flavorings and other
additives to make their products
taste milder, easier to inhale and
more attractive to children and
first-time smokers. A few aspects
of product design not disclosed to
consumers include the use of:
-
Ammonia to increase the speed
and efficiency of nicotine
absorption.
-
Eugenol and menthol to numb the
throat to minimize irritation
from smoke.
-
Glycerin and cocoa to enable
deep lung exposure (cocoa
produces carcinogens when
burned).
-
Sugars and chocolate to make
smoke milder and make cigarettes
more appealing, especially to
children and first time smokers.
Filter technology and ventilation
holes that allow deep penetration of
nicotine into the lungs of the
smoker and increase the
addictiveness of the product.
The report makes it clear that
tobacco products are “highly
engineered nicotine delivery
devices, finely tuned to appeal to
the taste, feel, smell and other
sensations of new and addicted
smokers.”
“It is mind-boggling that tobacco
products are the number one cause of
preventable death in the
United States,
yet they are virtually unregulated
to protect public health,” said
William V. Corr, Executive Director
of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free
Kids. “Until Congress grants the
FDA authority over tobacco products,
America’s kids and consumers will
remain guinea pigs in the tobacco
industry’s never-ending experiments
to sell more of its deadly and
addictive products.”
Tobacco companies have introduced an
even broader array of products
internationally that could appear on
the U.S. market. New products
recently launched by Philip Morris
International include Marlboro Mix
9, a high-tar, high-nicotine product
sold in Indonesia, and Marlboro
Intense, a short but strong version
of the brand that is being tested in
Turkey and lets smokers get a quick
nicotine hit when stepping outside
smoke-free environments.
Bipartisan legislation pending
before Congress (S. 625/H.R. 1108)
would give the FDA authority to:
Restrict tobacco advertising and
promotions, especially to children.
- Ban candy-flavored cigarettes.
- Require tobacco companies to
disclose the contents of tobacco
products, changes to their products
and research about the health
effects of their products.
- Require changes in tobacco
products, such as the removal or
reduction of harmful ingredients.
- Prohibit health claims about
so-called “reduced risk” products
that are not scientifically proven
or that would discourage current
tobacco users from quitting or
encourage new users to start.
- Require larger, more effective
health warnings on tobacco products.
- Prohibit terms such as “low-tar,”
“light” and “mild” that have misled
consumers into believing that
certain cigarettes are safer than
others.
The Senate bill, sponsored by U.S.
Senators Edward Kennedy (D-MA) and
John Cornyn (R-TX), has 56 sponsors
and co-sponsors, while the House
bill, sponsored by U.S. Reps. Henry
Waxman (D-CA) and Tom Davis (R-VA),
has 215 sponsors and co-sponsors.
The legislation is also supported by
more than 580 public health, faith
and other organizations across the
country. A poll conducted in 2007
found that 70 percent of American
voters support Congress passing the
legislation.
“The tobacco industry has repeatedly
marketed its deadly, addictive
products to children as part of a
broad strategy to hook the next
generation of customers by
portraying smoking as glamorous,
cool and alluring. That is the
reason why every day 4,000 new kids
try their first cigarette,” said
Daniel E. Smith, president of the
American Cancer Society Cancer
Action Network (ACS CAN). “Congress
must act now to reduce suffering and
death from tobacco-related disease
and free our youth from the firm
grasp of the rogue tobacco
industry.”
“The bottom line is that tobacco
companies continue to put our
children at greater risk for heart
disease and stroke with shady
marketing and product design.
Wishful thinking won’t change that,
but the FDA regulation of tobacco
products will,” said M. Cass
Wheeler, CEO of the American Heart
Association.
"Congress has an unprecedented
opportunity in 2008 to pass this
life-saving legislation that will
finally give FDA the authority to
crack down on the tobacco companies
and their new deadly products,” said
Bernadette A. Toomey, President and
CEO of the American Lung
Association. “Now is the time for
them to act to protect kids and
prevent them from a lifetime of
addiction and disease at the hands
of these shameful new products."
Tobacco use is the leading
preventable cause of death in the
United States, killing more than
400,000 people and costing the
nation nearly $100 billion in health
care bills each year. About 90
percent of adult smokers begin in
their teens or earlier. Every day,
another 1,000 kids become regular,
daily smokers, and one-third of them
will die prematurely as a result.
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report
Joel Spivak/Nicole Dueffert,
202-296-5469