Los Angeles Times

In Canada, each cigarette will soon bear a warning

- By Alexandra E. Petri

Canada has taken an extraordin­ary step to curb tobacco use by requiring warning labels to be printed directly on individual cigarettes, becoming the first country in the world to do so, its health ministry said.

The new packaging will feature warnings including “Tobacco smoke harms children,” “Poison in every puff ” and “Cigarettes cause impotence.”

The warnings will appear in both English and French, the health ministry said Wednesday.

The government’s push to require warning labels is designed to help smokers quit, protect nonsmokers and young Canadians and reduce the appeal of tobacco use. It’s part of a federal strategy to lower tobacco use to less than 5% by 2035.

Tobacco kills an estimated 48,000 Canadians annually, said Carolyn Bennett, the associate minister of health.

“This bold step will make health warning messages virtually unavoidabl­e,” Bennett said, adding that the warnings, combined with an updated graphic on cigarette packaging, “will provide a real and startling reminder of the health consequenc­es of smoking.”

The regulation will go into effect in phases starting Aug. 1. The warnings will first appear on king-size cigarettes in July 2024, then on regular cigarettes and small cigars with tipping paper, and tubes, by the end of April 2025, the health ministry said.

Canada has been at the forefront in the fight against tobacco use. According to the health ministry, the nation became the first to impose requiremen­ts in 2000 to feature graphic images of the health hazards of smoking on cigarettes and other tobacco packages.

In the U.S., written health warnings first appeared on cigarette packages in 1966. They were updated in 1984 but remained unchanged for decades. In 2021, the Food and Drug Administra­tion imposed new rules requiring packaging to feature text warnings “along with photoreali­stic color images depicting some of the lesserknow­n, but serious health risks of cigarette smoking, including impact to fetal growth, cardiac disease, diabetes and more,” according to the agency.

Research has found such messaging to be varied in its effects.

A 2020 study published in the journal Human Communicat­ion Research concluded that cigarette warning labels using images increase the chances that smokers will kick their habits, but they do not necessaril­y influence beliefs about smoking-related health hazards.

A previous meta-analysis in 2016, conducted by some of the same authors behind the 2020 study, found that graphic images were more effective than text warnings at preventing smoking or getting smokers to quit.

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