Handsel Art
17 November 2010
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
contact J.R. Few
or 870-427-1365
HHS Announces Tobacco Strategy
Earlier this month the Director of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Kathleen Sebelius, announced the federal government’s latest strategy to control the leading cause of preventable death, tobacco. Headlining the announcement were the new graphic pack and ad warnings required by the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act giving limited authority over tobacco to the Food and Drug Administration. These 9 graphic warnings will cover 50% of any pack and 20% of advertising. In 1965 the tobacco lobby was successful in minimizing Surgeon General Luther Terry’s report that smoking caused cancer to the ubiquitous: “Smoking may be hazardous to your health.” Arguably, tobacco lobbyists still manipulate public policy.
Today 38 nations require similar or stronger warnings. Australia has required that all cigarettes be sold in plain packaging by 2012. Other nations‘ graphic pack warnings are a facet of the World Health Organizations Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. Ironically, the U.S. law requiring graphic warnings also inhibits this country’s compliance with the global treaty by including the tobacco industry on an FDA scientific advisory panel.
Requirements in the new legislation to quit using deceptive “light” and “low tar” packaging had been anticipated by the industry changing the actual language to suggestive lighter colored packaging. Actually, the elimination of the words “light” and “low tar” had been ordered by Judge Gladys Kessler in 2006 as part of her finding against the tobacco industry as racketeers. Restricting advertisements to black on white messaging were almost immediately struck down by the courts.
While the bill was supported by major public health groups, and global tobacco giant Philip Morris, not all advocates consider giving the FDA limited authority over tobacco a good idea. Dr. Heinz Ginzel, Emeritus Professor of Pharmacology and Toxicology at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences says, “ Any regulatory actions concerning tobacco taken under the auspices of the FDA are jeopardizing, contaminating, degrading and corrupting the declared original mission of the FDA.”
Other advocates like the National African American Tobacco Prevention Network object to a failure to include menthol flavoring while banning fruit and candy flavors. A recent press release from NAATPN states, “Our organizational stance is and has always been steeped in the historic exploitation and targeting of Black communities by the tobacco industry which began in the 1950’s when only 5% of our community smoked mentholated tobacco, and continues today because now nearly 83% of all tobacco consumed by Blacks is mentholated.” The FDA scientific advisory panel has until 2011 to determine how to regulate, if at all, menthol flavoring in tobacco.
One positive aspect of the new law is the removal of federal preemption for state and local governments to regulate point of purchase marketing. Currently the only signage or advertising mandates are legal age requirements. These are most often produced by the tobacco industry. Arkansans could now require the Quit Line be placed at point of purchase, regulate signage, or enhance any federal health warnings.
###
No comments:
Post a Comment