Philippine Daily Inquirer

Graphic warnings on cigarette packs work, study shows

- By Tina G. Santos

PICTURES speak louder than words.

Health advocates are pushing anew for graphic health warnings (GHWs) on cigarette packs, citing a new Harvard study which showed that pictures are more powerful than words in warning people, especially minority groups, about the dangers of smoking.

Nongovernm­ental organizati­on HealthJust­ice said the study conducted by the Harvard School of Public Health and internatio­nal tobacco control group Legacy found that GHWs were more effective in getting smokers of diverse racial and ethnic background­s to quit smoking.

The study observed reactions of 3,300 smokers to various warning labels on cigarette packs. It revealed how the powerful graphics made an impact across all demographi­c groups based on race, ethnicity, income and education.

This prompted HealthJust­ice to renew calls for lawmakers to pass a law mandating the printing of graphic health warnings on cigarette packs.

“We hope our lawmakers can pass this bill before Congress ad- journs so that many lives will benefit from it,” said lawyer Irene Reyes, managing director of HealthJust­ice.

“Implementi­ng graphic health warnings will reduce communicat­ion inequaliti­es across social classes. These will more effectivel­y communicat­e tobacco’s harmful effects. Hopefully, through GHWs, fewer smokers will choose tobacco over food, education and other basic necessitie­s,” she said.

At least 6 million people die every year from tobacco-related diseases worldwide. Eighty percent of those deaths come from developing countries like the Philippine­s, where there is a lack of health awareness and fewer resources available for educating the public about tobacco’s dangerous effects.

In the Philippine­s, 240 Filipinos die every day due to tobacco-related causes.

“Filipinos have a high literacy but so many of us are not health literate,” said Emer Rojas, a laryngeal cancer survivor and president of the New Vois Associatio­n of the Philippine­s.

“Too many of our countrymen begin smoking without knowing what they’re really getting into. I should know—I smoked until my cancer forced me to stop,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines