The new face of cigarettes?

The new look cigarette packets as they might appear if the Lib dem amendment is passedThe new look cigarette packets as they might appear if the Lib dem amendment is passed

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Friday, 04, Sep 2009 05:41

By Ian Dunt

Pressure is growing for the government to rid cigarette packets of their designs and branding ahead of a parliamentary vote next month.

The Liberal Democrats are trying to reintroduce an amendment to the health bill – due to be debated on the day parliament returns from summer recess – calling for the government to scrap cigarette pack designs.

In Australia, the government's Preventative Health Task Force has advised it to "eliminate promotion of tobacco products through design of packaging" as part of a comprehensive strategy to reduce tobacco deaths. The Lib Dems are calling for a similar move in the UK.

Meanwhile, new research from the University of Nottingham published today showed tobacco branding and packaging send misleading signals to young people and adult smokers.

The research reveals that products bearing the word 'smooth' or using light coloured branding misled people into thinking that the products are less harmful to their health.

"This research shows that the only sure way of putting an end to this misleading marketing is to require all tobacco products to be sold in plain packaging," said Deborah Arnott, chief executive of Ash, an anti-smoking group.

"That would remove false beliefs about different brands and communicate the message that all cigarettes are dangerous.

"This matter has been discussed by parliament and there is now a perfect opportunity to include a requirement for plain packaging of tobacco products to be included in the health bill."

Since 2002 it has been illegal for manufacturers to use trademarks, text or any sign to suggest that one tobacco product is less harmful than another. But campaigners say tobacco companies have now resorted to using colour and associative words to achieve the same goal.

"A central feature of tobacco marketing strategy has been to promote the perception that some cigarettes are less hazardous than others, so that smokers worried about their health are encouraged to switch brands rather than quit," said professor David Hammond, lead author of the report.

"These tactics are giving consumers a false sense of reassurance that simply does not exist."

Participants in the Nottingham study were shown pairs of cigarette packs and asked to compare them on five measures: taste, tar delivery, health risk, attractiveness, and either ease of quitting (adults) or which they would choose if trying smoking (children).

Adults and children were significantly more likely to rate packs with the terms 'light', 'smooth', 'silver' and 'gold' as lower tar, lower health risk and either easier to quit (adults) or their choice of pack if trying smoking (children).

More than half of adults and youth reported that brands labelled as 'smooth' were less harmful than the 'regular' variety.

Simon Clark, director of the smokers' rights group Forest questioned the evidence linking design to smoking habits.

"Very few people, if any, start smoking because they see a brightly coloured packet or the words 'light' or 'mild'," he told politics.co.uk.

"People aren't stupid. They know there are health risks associated with smoking regardless of the branding.

"Groups like ASH won't be happy until cigarettes are sold under the counter in plain white packets. This has nothing to do with the alleged impact of tobacco branding. It's all about the denormalisation of smoking, which has a rather Orwellian ring to it.

"This isn't the nanny state. It's the bully state. What next? Plain white labels on alcohol or food with a high calorie count?"

The colour of packs was also associated with perceptions of risk and brand appeal.

For example, compared to packs with a red logo, cigarettes in packs with a gold logo were rated as a lower health risk by 53 per cent of people and easier to quit by 31 per cent of adult smokers.

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  • "A whole lot regarding this 'research' depends on what questions were asked and how they were asked - as with any survey! As we all know, these questions are couched in such a way as to produce the results required.As for plain packaging being used to 'highlight' those buying their cigs abroad - at the moment that is still legal, but I wonder for how much longer?Whatever they do, plain packaging, hiding tobacco products under the counter, making it illegal to buy cigs abroad and bring them back into the UK, the black marketeers will have an absolute field day! After all, governments have not yet succeeded in beating the illegal drug trade or to stop under age drinking or binge drinking, so I don't suppose for one moment they will have any better success rate with smoking, whatever measures they adopt!Perhaps we need a new dictionary which gives the changed meaning of words we once thought we knew the meaning of!"

    Lyn (West Midlands) Posted: 04/09/2009 19:45:30

  • "Who would wish to believe this lot http://www.ukctcs.org/ukctcs/Staff.phpThey have repeatedly lied to us in the past to help their masters, the Pharma Companies in their quest for profit."

    Bill Gibson (Scotland) Posted: 06/09/2009 11:14:01

  • "The makers of fake cigarettes in the far east must be rubbing their hands. There has been a big increase in the smuggling of counterfeit cigarettes into many countries throughout the world and it will be very difficult to know a pack of real cigarettes from a fake pack."

    Charles1 (Bully State) Posted: 06/09/2009 12:47:15

  • "What a load of Codswollop, once again ASH trying to denormalize smoking and promote NRT products with false health scares. IF and its a big IF smoking is so harmful why are a 1/3 of the population over 60 when these people liived in an age where smoking and smoke was everywhere, and what is more they seem to have done well on it, maybe we came from a better Gene pool than the current lot, who it would appear will succumb to the merest wisp of second hand smoke. To think the colour of packets influence people is laughable, most people go on price and the only colour I would go for given the opportunity would be Black as in Market."

    Tone (Leicester) Posted: 06/09/2009 16:23:25

  • "Are the Lib-Dems aware that smokers make up one-third of the electorate? These people are neither liberal nor democratic and are clearly focussed on remaining unelectable."

    Blaggarde (Bully State) Posted: 07/09/2009 15:39:27

  • "What would plain cigarette packets do to stop people taking up smoking or protecting people from the so called effect of secondhand smoke? answer NOTHING, this stupid law is only there to program the minds of people against people who choose to smoke and a form of harassment against smokers, this is why phoney political parties like the Liberal Democrates should never be allowed into power,they are just another political party deaf to what the public say and rather carry on with the Labour parties attack on people who smoke by spreading there properganda, there is nothing liberal about this party they seem hell bent on pushing for robotic dictatorship."

    clif e (london uk) Posted: 08/09/2009 07:13:00

  • "What on earth is the matter with these people. No one in their right mind buys cigarettes or any thing else because of the packets,We buy the things that we like, plain packets cant possibly make any difference to the contents, and as for hiding cigarettes under the counter,the only possible effect that this will have is to make fags even cooler than they are already. the smoking ban has had the effect of reviving the image of cigarettes with young people it is now, not just a great pleasurable experience (as it always was) but now it has been made cool again to youngsters (all the figures show this), because of the halfwits in parliment with their crackpot ideas. we have a government that has chosen to make itself unelectable EVER again because of this smoking ban.the rest of those in parliment are no better, where did this nonsence that smokers want to quit come from, its pure lunacy, surely common sence should tell the government that the pubs are closing becuase the smokers dont go anymore, this type of foolishness is not what the smokers (37% of the electorate) want. Gordon Brown (the control freak)is more hated be us Labour voters than the lunatic Thatcher. I personally dont blame the government for having a go at persuading people to stop smoking, however i do blame parliment for not realising that the smoking ban is a total failure & should be repealed on the grounds that majority of the public didnt want it(again a matter of public record)& still do not want it. we are the laughing stock of Europe (again) If they are not going to learn by their mistakes then they should be sacked & a new parliment consisting of grown ups should be elected. they think that we have forgoten about the expenses scandle, they think we are stupid & we are for putting up with them. "

    jon kenney (Birmingham) Posted: 12/09/2009 21:08:10

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