Tough Anti-Smoking Law Puts Consumers' Health First

Obama signed a bill that gives the FDA broad authority to regulate the tobacco industry

June 22, 2009 RSS Feed Print

Pick up a pack of cigarettes in Brazil, and you'll see a photograph of a tiny fetus, a gangrene-infected foot, a cadaver with a hole in the throat, or one of several other images warning of smoking-related risks.

Only a handful of countries require such stark photographic warnings. But thanks to sweeping legislation recently passed by Congress and signed by President Obama today, the United States is about to join the club. The Food and Drug Administration will have two years to develop "color graphic labels" for all cigarettes sold in the country. And that's just one of dozens of changes the tobacco industry faces.

Widely hailed as a landmark public-health event, the bill empowers the FDA to reduce nicotine levels in cigarettes, bans many flavored cigarettes, and imposes strict limits on where tobacco companies can advertise. Politicians have long pursued such reforms, dating back to Sen. Robert Kennedy's effort in the 1960s to ban cigarette advertising from television and radio. His brother, Sen. Ted Kennedy, who championed the bill in the Senate, hailed the legislative victory as proof "that miracles still happen."

The bill is far from the final word on tobacco regulation, however. If anything, it has sparked contentious debate about how far the FDA should go to force Big Tobacco to make cigarettes less addictive, about whether the bill is too generous to the industry (it doesn't ban menthol, for instance), and about whether certain provisions will actually stand up in court. "If you look at this bill, it's a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," says Gregory Connolly, a public-health professor at Harvard and a leading tobacco regulation expert. "There is a piece there for Philip Morris, and there is a piece there for the kids."

One example is its approach to tobacco's addictiveness. The bill prohibits the FDA from totally removing nicotine from cigarettes, but it does allow the agency to consider reducing nicotine to nonaddictive levels. Determining that threshold, however, will require more research. Even then, officials may struggle to keep up with the industry's knack for reinventing its product. "Every time we blink, there is a new product on the street," says Connolly. "What we first have to do is stop innovation."

Another main provision, a ban on advertisements within 1,000 feet of schools and playgrounds, is already being challenged by the industry and First Amendment groups. "My concern is that a keyelement of the bill will be made illegal by a decision of the Supreme Court, and that will cascade through the states as well,"says Cheryl Healton, president of the American Legacy Foundation, a national antitobacco group. In 2001, the Supreme Court struck down a similar law in Massachusetts.

The bill reserves some of its most explicit language for labels, which will have to cover 50 percent of the front and back of a pack. The word WARNING will have to be printed in capital letters in 17-point font. And rather than gingerly alerting smokers to potential health consequences, new labels will cut to the point. Among the approved phrases: "cigarettes cause cancer" and "smoking can kill you."

Tobacco companies shouldn't have much trouble meeting that last requirement. They've been making bigger labels in the United States for years and shipping them out of the country to nations that have long done more to inform smokers of their risks.

Tags:
smoking and tobacco,
FDA,
Barack Obama

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I started smoking when I was 12 yrs old. I am now 30. I have been smoke free for almost 5 months now. I quit cold turkey. I do not agree with this bill, even though now I am a non-smoker. If someone wants to smoke, they HAVE the right to do it, perhaps not to the detriment of others around them, but in their own homes or cars. Now, there is not a PERSON in the USA that can say that they DON'T know that cigarettes are bad for them and cause cancer and could kill them. So why make the WARNING label bigger? People aren't stupid. They are just addicts. They are well aware of the health effects of smoking but they chose to do it anyway. So if they keep it away from non-smokers, who DO have the right to clean air (seeng how they are CHOOSING not to smoke)then why make the smoking corps. make those DUMB changes. Like I said, smokers are WELL aware of the risk of cancer and even death and they STILL continue to smoke, so I HIGHLY doubt a picture of someone with cancer, or a dead fetus or any other nasty picture put on a label to try to deter them, would work. My guess is that a lot of money would be wasted, and people would STILL smoke. How about taking a better look at alcohol, which causes liver damage, deadly crashes and a list of other things. Yet there are no WARNING labels on alcohol bottles. No one goes and smokes a few cigarettes and then gets behind the wheel and ends up getting in an accident and killing someone else or themselves. Yet people that drink, end up in deadly crashes all the time. Get your priorities straight Washington.

Started Out Hopeful for "CHANGE" of CO 11:52PM April 26, 2010

I started smoking when I was 12 yrs old. I am now 30. I have been smoke free for almost 5 months now. I quit cold turkey. I do not agree with this bill, even though now I am a non-smoker. If someone wants to smoke, they HAVE the right to do it, perhaps not to the detriment of others around them, but in their own homes or cars. Now, there is not a PERSON in the USA that can say that they DON'T know that cigarettes are bad for them and cause cancer and could kill them. So why make the WARNING label bigger? People aren't stupid. They are just addicts. They are well aware of the health effects of smoking but they chose to do it anyway. So if they keep it away from non-smokers, who DO have the right to clean air (seeng how they are CHOOSING not to smoke)then why make the smoking corps. make those DUMB changes. Like I said, smokers are WELL aware of the risk of cancer and even death and they STILL continue to smoke, so I HIGHLY doubt a picture of someone with cancer, or a dead fetus or any other nasty picture put on a label to try to deter them, would work. My guess is that a lot of money would be wasted, and people would STILL smoke. How about taking a better look at alcohol, which causes liver damage, deadly crashes and a list of other things. Yet there are no WARNING labels on alcohol bottles. No one goes and smokes a few cigarettes and then gets behind the wheel and ends up getting in an accident and killing someone else or themselves. Yet people that drink, end up in deadly crashes all the time. Get your priorities straight Washington.

Started Out Hopeful for "CHANGE" of CO 11:52PM April 26, 2010

Ban food for the 500lb people who want to eat cheese fries for dinner.... Number one cause of death right there

me of NE 5:31PM October 14, 2009

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