Big tobacco:
50 years of lies. Now what?
Editorial - The Christian Science Monitor - August 22, 2006
For 50 years, big tobacco has "lied" to the American public about
the devastating health effects of smoking, a US judge ruled last week. That's
a moral victory for the federal government, which initiated this massive court
case seven years ago. Sadly, the ruling will do little to remedy the problem
of tobacco use.
The federal case comes after a major settlement between the tobacco firms
and 46 states in 1998. In the end, the industry agreed to compensate all 50
states $246 billion over 25 years for health costs related to smoking. They
also agreed to marketing changes - such as taking down billboard ads - and
to help pay for antismoking campaigns.
But the federal government didn't believe the settlement with the states went
far enough, or it wouldn't have brought its own suit seeking a $280 billion
penalty for conspiring to hide smoking's harmful effects. About half that
amount was to fund smoking cessation and prevention programs and public education
about the dangers of tobacco.
The federal case tried to do what the states settlement didn't - change practices
in the industry and adequately fund campaigns to prevent and reduce smoking.
There's an enormous desire among America's 47 million smokers to quit, and
every effort should be made to help them, and to prevent potential smokers
(mostly young people) from starting.
While big tobacco may maintain it has already reformed and already paid by
virtue of its states settlement, US District Judge Gladys Kessler found last
week that fraud is ongoing.
"As the evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates,
[tobacco's] fraudulent conduct has permeated all aspects of their operations
- from how they design, manufacture, and market their products to how they
communicate with the public about them - and continues to this day."
Judge Kessler did her best to remedy this. She ordered the defendants, including
Philip Morris and R.J. Reynolds, to stop using terms such as "light"
and "low tar," which mislead smokers to believe such cigarettes
are significantly less harmful; to issue corrective statements in newspapers
and on TV; to share marketing data with the government; and to pay the government's
legal fees. But she didn't do anything to help fund antismoking efforts or
grant the government its sought-after penalty.
This is because she was restricted by a federal appeals court ruling last
year. The court found that, because the US was bringing the tobacco case under
the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, remedies must be "forward-looking,"
and ill-gotten industry gains from the past could not be used. The US then
dropped its penalty demand to $14 billion.
So Ms. Kessler has found that big tobacco is a fraudulent bunch of racketeers,
but she can't do much about it. Who can?
That would have to be Congress. Legislation has languished that would give
the Food and Drug Administration regulatory oversight of tobacco - a legal
industry, yes, but also one that sells an addictive substance and that kills
hundreds of thousands of people each year. Kessler's hands were tied, but
that's not the case with Congress. If it can resist $22 million in tobacco
lobbying, it can act.
Copyright © 2006 The Christian Science Monitor
Raising Nicotine Doses,
on the Sly
Editorial - The New York Times - August 31, 2006
While most of us thought the country was trying to curb smoking, and the rapacious
habits of the tobacco companies, it turns out the industry has been sneakily
making cigarettes more addictive.
Evidence of what looks like an increasingly desperate effort to hook new young
smokers and prevent older ones from quitting has been uncovered by a Massachusetts
law that forces tobacco companies to report test results showing how much
nicotine is inhaled by typical smokers of their various brands.
This week, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health revealed that from
1998 through 2004, as public health campaigns were mounted to curb smoking,
the manufacturers increased the amount of addictive nicotine delivered to
the average smoker by 10 percent. Of 179 cigarette brands tested in 2004,
an astonishing 166 brands fell into the states highest nicotine yield
range, including 59 brands that the manufacturers had labeled light
and 14 described as ultra-light. The three most popular brands
chosen by young smokers Marlboro, Newport and Camel all delivered
significantly more nicotine as the years passed. Virtually all brands were
found to deliver a high enough nicotine dose to cause heavy dependence.
This trend has escaped notice because the standard government test uses a
smoking machine that fails to mimic real-life smoking. A manufacturer, for
example, can design a cigarette that will score low in nicotine delivery to
the machine by placing tiny ventilation holes in the filter to dilute the
smoke. But in real life a smoker will often cover the vents with lips or fingers,
thereby inhaling a higher dose of nicotine. When Massachusetts required the
manufacturers to use what it considered a more realistic method, the nicotine
yields were more than twice those found on the standard test. The Massachusetts
approach may not be perfect, but it is surely a lot more accurate than the
traditional test, which virtually all independent experts consider deficient.
It is stunning to discover how easily this rogue industry was able to increase
public consumption of nicotine without anyone knowing about it until Massachusetts
blew the whistle. The Massachusetts report bears out the conclusions of a
federal judge in Washington, who recently concluded that the companies have
designed cigarettes to produce low nicotine readings on the standard test
while delivering enough nicotine to create and sustain addiction. It is long
past time for Congress to bring this damaging and deceitful industry under
federal regulatory control. If the companies had to justify to the Food and
Drug Administration why they should be allowed to increase the nicotine inhaled
by smokers, you can bet they wouldnt even try.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company | Top