Plain tobacco packs likely to deter
smoking, studies show
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[February 17, 2015]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Studies on the health
impact of "plain" or standardized cigarette packs suggest they can deter
non-smokers from taking up the habit and may cut the number of
cigarettes smokers get through, scientists said on Tuesday.
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In a collection of scientific papers in the journal Addiction,
researchers said that while standardized packs were still too new to
provide substantial evidence, studies so far showed they were likely
to reduce smoking rates.
Britain plans before May to become the second country in the world
to introduce non-branded, standardized packaging for cigarettes,
after the government promised last month to pass legislation that
would come into effect in 2016.
Australia introduced standardized packaging two years ago in the
face of fierce opposition from the tobacco industry. Its law forced
cigarettes to be sold in plain green packs with health warnings and
images showing the damaging effects of smoking.
In the Addiction series of studies, researchers found that after
Australia's move in 2012, when plain packages were introduced and
the health warnings and images on them were made larger, smoking in
outdoor areas of cafes, bars and restaurants declined and fewer
smokers left their packs visible on tables.
Another study found that removing brand imagery from packs increased
the focus on health warnings among occasional smokers and
adolescents just starting to smoke.
Robert West, editor-in-chief of the journal, said plain packaging's
effect on young potential smokers was likely to be the most
important initial impact.
"Even if standardized packaging had no effect at all on current
smokers and only stopped one in 20 young people from being lured
into smoking (in the UK), it would save about 2,000 lives a year,"
he told reporters at a briefing in London.
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Tobacco firms have fought hard against the new law, saying standard
packs infringe on intellectual property rights covering branding and
will only increase counterfeiting and smuggling.
But Ann McNeill, a professor of tobacco addiction at King's College
London, said cigarette makers should note that if their product had
been invented today, it would never have even reached the consumer
market.
"For an addictive product that kills so many of its users, the
tobacco industry should consider itself fortunate that ... it is
allowed to sell its toxic products at all, let alone try to make
them attractive through the packaging," she said.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; editing by Andrew Roche)
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