FDA Unveils New Cigarette Health Warnings
Consumers
are getting a glimpse of warnings images that will be alternating on all
cigarette packages and advertisements within 15 months—an effort by health
officials to discourage smoking by bringing Americans face to face with
tobacco-related disease.
The Food
and Drug Administration unveiled the nine, color images—including some of
bodies ravaged by disease—at a news conference. The images, which are paired
with text health warnings, are required under the 2009 Family Smoking
Prevention and Tobacco Control Act. They must appear on every cigarette pack,
carton, and advertisement by September 2012.
“President
Obama is committed to protecting our nation’s children and the American people
from the dangers of tobacco use. These labels are frank, honest and powerful
depictions of the health risks of smoking and they will help encourage smokers
to quit, and prevent children from smoking,” said Health and Human Services
Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.
Nine
Warnings
In
November, FDA officials posted 36 images on the Internet and gave the public 90
days to comment. The agency received more than 1,700 comments from the public,
retailers, health professionals, advocacy groups, the tobacco industry, state
and local public health agencies, and others.
Regulators
used the comments, scientific literature, and the results of an 18,000-person
study to narrow the images to nine. Each of the images—a mix of illustrations
and photos depicting the negative health consequences of smoking—will be paired
with one of these nine printed warnings:
·
WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive—with an image of a man
smoking through a hole in his throat
·
WARNING: Tobacco smoke can harm your children—with an image
of a parent holding a baby as smoke drifts towards them
·
WARNING: Cigarettes cause fatal lung disease—with an image
of a disease-riddled lung and a healthy lung
·
WARNING: Cigarettes cause cancer—with an image of an open
sore and stained teeth on the lips and mouth of a smoker with mouth cancer
·
WARNING: Cigarettes cause strokes and heart disease—with an
image of a man who needs an oxygen mask to breathe
·
WARNING: Smoking during pregnancy can harm your baby—with
an illustration of a crying newborn in an incubator and hooked-up to a monitor
·
WARNING: Smoking can kill you—with the image of a dead man
with a surgery-scarred chest
·
WARNING: Tobacco smoke causes fatal lung disease in
nonsmokers—with an image of a grieving family member
·
WARNING: Quitting smoking now greatly reduces serious risks
to your health—with an image of a man wearing an “I Quit” T-shirt
Expected
Impact
FDA
Commissioner Margaret A. Hamburg, M.D., says she’s hopeful the graphic images
will give smokers the incentive to quit and prevent potential smokers from ever
starting. In fact, the phone number for the smoking cessation
hotline—1-800-QUIT-NOW—will accompany each warning.
“The
Tobacco Control Act requires FDA to provide current and potential smokers with
clear and truthful information about the risks of smoking—these warnings do
that,” she says.
The bold
health warnings will cover the top 50 percent of the front and rear panels of
all cigarette packages and at least 20 percent of each advertisement. They are
expected to decrease the number of smokers, which will save lives and increase
life expectancy.
The Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention says tobacco use is the leading cause of
premature and preventable death in the United States, responsible for 443,000
deaths each year. Tobacco addiction costs the U.S. economy nearly $200 billion
every year in medical costs and lost productivity.
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