UK plain cigarette pack
law seen cutting number of smokers by 300,000
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[April 27, 2017] By
Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - The introduction of
plain packaging for tobacco cigarettes sold in Britain from next month
could cut the number of smokers in the country by another 300,000 within
a year, researchers said on Thursday.
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Based on observational evidence and a review of more than 50
experimental studies on the potential impact of plain packs, experts
from the Cochrane Review said they appear to diminish the appeal of
tobacco and help reduce smoking prevalence.
Australia was the first country in the world to implement
standardized packaging of tobacco products, in December 2012, and
data collected since then suggest the new measure led to an extra
0.5 percent a year decline in the number of smokers there.
British legislation on plain packaging for tobacco comes into full
effect from May 2017. Plain or standardized packs must be a uniform
color, have no logos apart from health warnings and other
government-mandated information, and use a prescribed uniform font,
color and size for the brand name.
"We are not able to say for sure what the impact would be in the UK,
but if the same magnitude of decrease was seen.. as was observed in
Australia, this would translate to roughly 300,000 fewer (UK)
smokers," said Jamie Hartmann-Boyce, a researcher at the Cochrane
Tobacco Addiction Group in Oxford.
According to the World Health Organization, tobacco kills more
people worldwide than any other preventable cause of death.
The introduction of plain packaging is recommended under the WHO's
Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC).
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The Cochrane team analyzed 51 studies and sought to analyze and
summarize their findings. This was hampered by the fact that many of
the studies differed in the way they were done and also what they
measured, and the fact that so far, only one country had implemented
standardized packaging.
"Our evidence suggests standardized packaging can change attitudes
and beliefs about smoking, and the evidence we have so far suggests
that standardized packaging may reduce smoking prevalence and
increase quit attempts," Hartmann-Boyce said.
(Editing by Ralph Boulton)
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