The Hamilton Spectator

Tobacco battles plain packaging regulation­s

Canada should stay the course and be a world leader in public health

- JULIA SMITH, BENJAMIN HAWKINS, JAPPE ECKHARDT AND ROSS MACKENZIE

No matter how you look at it, a standardiz­ed cigarette pack is ugly. The colours are unappealin­g, the font bland and the large graphic health warnings gruesome. That’s why standardiz­ed packaging is such an effective public health policy — and why tobacco companies hate it.

The Canadian government is currently drafting regulation­s on standardiz­ed tobacco packaging as required by the new Tobacco and Vaping Products Act passed in May 2018. Tobacco companies are trying to weaken regulation­s through lobbying and public relations campaigns.

Our research finds that these efforts are based on the same arguments and selective sources of informatio­n that the industry has used in other countries that have proposed similar measures, including Australia, the U.K. and the Netherland­s.

We reviewed tobacco industry campaigns from around the world and found they all used the same key messages: That no evidence exists to support claims for the effectiven­ess of plain packaging; that such legislatio­n contribute­s to a “slippery slope” of regulation that would accelerate the encroachme­nt of the “nanny state” into citizens’ lives; that standardiz­ed packaging represents a threat to intellectu­al property rights and would increase the illicit trade in tobacco products.

To support these messages, public relations documents refer exclusivel­y to studies funded by the tobacco industry or from groups with links to the tobacco industry.

In Canada, JTI-MacDonald, the country’s third-largest tobacco company, launched the Both Sides of the Argument campaign, which claims to presents the “facts” against standardiz­ed packaging using websites, posters, advertisem­ents, as well as Twitter and Facebook accounts.

Campaign materials argue that no credible evidence has emerged from Australia to support the effectiven­ess of standardiz­ed packaging, and repeat the same misleading messages used to challenge legislatio­n in Australia and the U.K.

The campaign quotes research from consulting firms paid for by tobacco companies, which do not describe their methods in detail or subject them to peer review.

Knowing they have little public credibilit­y, tobacco companies rely on “arms-length” advocacy groups to create false controvers­y around packaging regulation­s.

For instance, the National Coalition Against Contraband Tobacco argues that “plain packaging has increased contraband tobacco in other countries and will likely do the same in Canada” without providing evidence of increased illicit activity elsewhere.

The coalition receives funding from the tobacco industry and lists the Tobacco Manufactur­es Associatio­n as one of its members.

The Canadian Convenienc­e Store Associatio­n, which has also received tobacco industry funding, argues that plain packaging would hurt small business, basing its claim on “detailed studies from Australia,” which were commission­ed by British American Tobacco Australia and Philip Morris Australia.

What is presented as concern for the unfair treatment of small, local businesses is in fact the desire of some of the largest and most profitable global corporatio­ns to protect their profits at the expense of public health.

A recent poll by Global News found that 63 per cent of respondent­s in Canada did not think standardiz­ed packaging would reduce smoking rates. This not only suggests that tobacco industry public relations campaigns are working, they’re also muddying the debate by framing success of the policy in terms of immediate smoking reductions.

This is a diversiona­ry tactic also used in Australia, with some success, and it is now being reproduced in Canada.

Proponents of standardiz­ed packaging do not claim the policy will result in immediate smoking reductions. The long-term goals are to discourage people (especially youth) from taking up smoking, to encourage smokers to quit and to avoid relapse among ex-smokers. Evidence from Australia demonstrat­es that standardiz­ed packaging is making progress in achieving these goals.

Canadian policy-makers can anticipate ongoing opposition from tobacco companies when they enact packaging legislatio­n. Experience­s from Australia and elsewhere suggest that industry campaigns do not end with implementa­tion, but continue on after new laws are introduced in an attempt to discredit and ultimately repeal the policy.

Policy advocates must therefore remain vigilant and prepared to counter industry misinforma­tion.

Adopting standardiz­ed packaging policy is not only crucial to protect the health of Canadians, but will have internatio­nal significan­ce.

Julia Smith is a Research Associate at Simon Fraser University. Benjamin Hawkins is an Assistant Professor, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. Jappe Eckhardt is a Lecturer in Politics and Internatio­nal Relations, University of York. Ross MacKenzie is a Lecturer in Health Studies, Macquarie University. This originally appeared at theconvers­ation.com

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