Los Angeles Times

FDA moves to ban menthol cigarettes

Agency says outlawing sale of the mint flavor would prevent death among Black smokers.

- By Erin B. Logan

WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administra­tion on Thursday announced it would move to ban menthol tobacco cigarettes and flavored cigars, a historic step the agency said would significan­tly prevent death and disease, particular­ly among Black Americans.

A ban would “significan­tly reduce youth initiation, increase the chances of smoking cessation among current smokers, and address health disparitie­s experience­d by communitie­s of color, low-income population­s, and LGBTQ+ individual­s, all of whom are far more likely to use these tobacco products,” acting FDA Commission­er Janet Woodcock said in a statement.

Studies have shown that 7 out of 10 Black youths who smoke use menthol. More than 90% of Black adults who smoke began by using menthol cigarettes, compared with fewer than 45% of white adults, according to another study.

The FDA said it is working to propose regulation­s banning menthol flavor within the next year, a move that could lead more than 900,000 smokers, including more than 200,000 Black Americans, to quit within the first year and a half of a ban, its statement said.

The move is in response to a lawsuit filed last summer by medical groups, including the American Medical Assn., that aimed to force a final decision on a ban and alleged that regulators “unreasonab­ly delayed” responding to a 2013 citizen petition urging a ban.

Congress in 2009 banned the sale of most flavored cigarettes, except menthol, a popular flavor, after industry lobbyists negotiated an exemption. Lawmakers instructed the FDA to study the impact of menthol in cigarettes and deferred further action to the regulatory agency, a “political decision that allowed a deadly product aimed at African Americans to continue to claim lives unjustly,” Dr. Richard E. Besser, president and chief executive of the public health-focused Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, wrote in an op-ed last week.

Dr. Susan Bailey, president of the AMA, in a statement to The Times described the announceme­nt as “long-overdue” and a “major step toward preventing a new generation from becoming tobacco users and saving lives.”

Last year, the Democratic-controlled House of Representa­tives approved a bill that would ban the sale of flavored e-cigarettes as well as menthol cigarettes. But the measure did not progress in the Republican­controlled Senate after the Trump White House said it was opposed.

Any FDA action on menthol cigarettes is likely to be challenged by the tobacco industry. Altria Group, one of the largest producers and marketers of tobacco products, in a statement to The Times said that “criminaliz­ing menthol will lead to serious unintended consequenc­es.”

“We will review FDA’s announceme­nt and continue to engage in this multi-year process with a focus on the science and evidence,” the statement said.

By midday Thursday, Altria’s stock fell due to a mixed first-quarter earnings report and the FDA’s announceme­nt, according to Barron’s.

Though a ban would have a significan­t impact on the health of many Black Americans, civil rights groups also warned that it could further criminaliz­e many.

Aamra Ahmad, senior legislativ­e counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union, warned in a statement that the move could have “serious racial justice implicatio­ns.”

Ahmad noted that minor encounters Black Americans have had with police have gone horribly wrong. For one, Eric Garner died in 2014 after a New York City police officer placed him in a chokehold after stopping him for selling loose cigarettes.

“There are serious concerns that the ban implemente­d by the Biden administra­tion will eventually foster an undergroun­d market that is sure to trigger criminal penalties which will disproport­ionately impact people of color and prioritize criminaliz­ation over public health and harm reduction,” Ahmad said.

The FDA in its announceme­nt said that if implemente­d, “enforcemen­t of any ban on menthol cigarettes and all flavored cigars will only address manufactur­ers, distributo­rs, wholesaler­s, importers and retailers.”

California last year banned the sale of flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes. The law was placed on hold in January after state officials said a referendum, funded largely by the tobacco industry, qualified for the November 2022 ballot. The law is suspended until voters decide whether to affirm or repeal the ban.

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