Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOH TOLD TO ENSURE CIGARETTE PACKS HAVE NEW GRAPHIC WARNINGS

- By Julie M. Aurelio @JMAurelioI­NQ

Tobacco control advocates have called on the Department of Health (DOH) to ensure that tobacco products would be showing new graphic health warnings on the negative effects of smoking by March 3.

The Southeast Asia Tobacco Control Alliance (Seatca) and HealthJust­ice Philippine­s said tobacco companies should communicat­e the new graphic health warnings, which are only valid for two years.

“There should be no excuse for tobacco companies not to comply with this. We call on the DOH to ensure that all tobacco products carry the new set of warnings it prescribed,” said Ulysses Dorotheo, Seatca’s director for framework convention for tobacco control.

“The Bureau of Internal Revenue should ensure that excise tax stamps are affixed only to tobacco products with the new warnings,” he said, adding that violators should be fined or prosecuted.

Templates

Under Republic Act No. 10643, or the graphic health warnings law, the first set of graphic health warnings were issued and enforced by the DOH on March 3, 2016, and would be valid for two years.

The warning labels—which comes with photos of patients suffering from severe diseases traced to smoking, or that of their affected body parts— alert smokers and secondhand smokers on the harmful effects of smoking.

The graphic health warnings are supposed to be changed periodical­ly so the public would not be accustomed to seeing the same images.

In August last year, the DOH issued templates for the graphic health warnings on tobacco products, illustrati­ng the illnesses associated with tobacco use, particular­ly, gangrene, asthma, emphysema, mouth cancer, neck cancer, premature birth, still birth, stroke and throat cancer.

Last year, the DOH issued a second set of graphic health warning templates to replace the first set.

This means all tobacco products made in the Philippine­s or imported into the country are required to carry the new graphic health warnings.

“It is important that health warnings and images are changed after a certain period to enhance and maintain the maximum impact over time,” Dorotheo said.

Decrease appeal

The warnings are designed to decrease the attractive­ness and appeal of cigarettes, countering the persuasive images that tobacco companies use to promote their products.

HealthJust­ice Philippine­s urged the public to watch out for the new set of graphic health warnings on tobacco products to help in monitoring the compliance of tobacco companies.

Mary Ann Fernandez-Mendoza, HealthJust­ice president, said the Philippine­s, as a party to the World Health Organizati­on’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, was dutybound to implement rotating graphic health warnings on tobacco products.

Fines, violations

Under RA 10643, each instance of import and export of noncomplia­nt tobacco products will constitute one offense, with a P100,000 fine each day of violation.

Sellers of tobacco products who sell noncomplia­nt products will be meted fines ranging from P10,000 to P100,000 and sentenced to a one-year prison term.

Cigarette makers, importers and distributo­rs who display tobacco materials that do not have graphic health warnings will get a two-year-prison term and meted fines ranging from P500,000 to P2,000,000.

 ?? RICHARD A. REYES ?? GRAPHIC IMAGES Under the law, these “scary” cigarette packs are up for revision and tobacco companies must be compliant by today, according to antismokin­g advocates.
RICHARD A. REYES GRAPHIC IMAGES Under the law, these “scary” cigarette packs are up for revision and tobacco companies must be compliant by today, according to antismokin­g advocates.

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