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June, 2013:

‘Quit Smoking With Barça’ Lights up at Awards While Europe Stubs Out

http://www.prnewswire.co.uk/news-releases/quit-smoking-with-barca-lights-up-at-awards-while-europe-stubs-out-210629891.html

‘Quit Smoking With Barça‘ Lights up at Awards While Europe Stubs Out

BRUSSELS, June 7, 2013 /PRNewswire/ —

EC Campaign scoops multiple awards as more than 70,000 men and women across Europe seek to ‘Quit Smoking With Barça

The European Commission’s ‘Quit Smoking With Barça‘ programme (http://www.quitsmokingwithbarca.eu) has achieved a series of accolades, receiving an impressive four industry awards this week. The programme, now supporting more than 70,000 men and women to kick the habit, was awarded three prizes at last night’s CCB (Creative Club of Belgium) awards recognising originality and creativity in advertising;

· 1 Silver Direct

· 1 Gold Integrated

· 1 Gold Cyber

This success follows Wednesday’s noteworthy win at the EACA care awards in the ‘Government Bodies and Related Organisations’ category. The EACA Care Awards are established to highlight the advertising industry’s contribution to society by selecting and celebrating the most powerful and relevant social marketing campaigns. Standing out from the competition in this category, ‘Quit Smoking With Barça‘ was recognised for its specific contribution to public lung health by actively supporting smoking cessation across Europe.

Devised by Saatchi & Saatchi Brussels and launched in December last year, ‘Quit Smoking With Barça‘ is an innovation of the EC’s “Ex-Smokers are Unstoppable” campaign (http://www.exsmokers.eu), and the product of a unique partnership with world leading football team, FC Barcelona (FCB). At the heart of the campaign is the FCB iCoach: a free digital health coach that provides tailored guidance and support to registered users direct from the mouths of Barça’s players, coaches and staff.

Dr. Jordi Monés, the director responsible for FCB’s medical area speaking of the win, said, “At Barça we firmly believe in our motto ‘more than a club’ and we promote values of respect, health and social commitment. The ‘Quit Smoking With Barça programme allows us to live that motto. We are delighted to continue to collaborate with the European Commission on such an important public health issue and these latest awards clearly demonstrate that our combined efforts are not going unnoticed.”

These accolades serve to reinforce the value of, and need for truly holistic campaigns,” said Deputy Executive Creative Director of Saatchi & Saatchi EMEA, Jan Teulingkx, speaking at the CCB awards in Knokke, Belgium last night. ” ‘Quit Smoking With Barça is a living, breathing example of how clever, creative strategy combined with meaningful, targeted communications can effect positive changes in public consciousness and in this case, public health. This approach underpins all that we stand for at Saatchi & Saatchi Brussels and we are proud to be a part of this important European Commission initiative.”

Further Information:

The ‘Quit Smoking with Barça‘ campaign

http://www.quitsmokingwithbarca.eu

The “Ex-Smokers are Unstoppable” campaign

http://www.exsmokers.eu

The official homepage of FC Barcelona

http://www.fcbarcelona.com

Tobacco firm begins ‘stealth-marketing’ campaign against plain packaging

Someone killed their website ! Know-more.co.uk is No-More

http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2013/jun/07/tobacco-firm-stealth-marketing-plain-packaging

Tobacco firm begins ‘stealth-marketing’ campaign against plain packaging

Messages in packs of Marlboro cigarettes invite buyers to visit campaigning website

Ben Quinn and Mark Sweney

The Guardian, Friday 7 June 2013 18.00 BST

Marlboro cigarettes

Inserts in cigarette packets highlight policies such as tax and the possibility of banning smoking in cars and homes. Photograph: Rex Features

With their backs to the wall amid increasingly tough regulations, as well as the looming threat of having to remove all branding from cigarette packets, tobacco companies need all the allies they can find. Who better to ask than the UK’s 10 million smokers themselves?

In a new stealth marketing campaign launched with the aid of a major lobbying firm which has waged similar offensives for rightwing causes in the US, the makers of Marlboro cigarettes are seeking to mobilise a grassroots fightback by customers against moves towards the introduction of blank packaging.

Buyers of Marlboro cigarettes have been finding messages inside their packets inviting them to visit a new campaigning website, Know-more.co.uk, which describes itself as “the community for Britain’s smokers”.

Philip Morris, which also makes brands including Chesterfield and Virginia for the UK market, is running three different inserts in packets highlighting tough policies that aim to hit a nerve with smokers – tax, the possibility of banning smoking in cars and homes, and how plain packaging might fuel the black market trade in cigarettes.

One insert reads: “Plain packaging is the latest in a stream of proposals targeting smokers. Other excessive schemes have been suggested. Know-more by learning the issues, then say no more to the government by joining our community and speaking out.”

The bottom left-hand corner of the website states that it is sponsored by Philip Morris Ltd.

A background check reveals that the site is registered to Democracy Data & Communications (DDC) Advocacy, a major US lobbying firm which has become a specialist in so-called stealth lobbying involving the setting up of “astroturf” websites and organisations to front campaigns that advocate for vested interests.

Its previous campaigns have included the establishment of a supposedly grassroots group called Citizens for a Safe Alexandria to attack moves by the Obama administration to prosecute Guantánamo Bay prisoners in the US state of Virginia. Others have been mounted on behalf of US private healthcare giants and in support of moves by George W Bush to privatise social security.

DDC’s founder, chairman and CEO is BR McConnon, a former employee at Citizens for a Sound Economy, an anti-regulation conservative political group whose offshoots have been reported to be guiding forces in the establishment of the Tea Party movement.

The Philip Morris campaign, which will run for the best part of a month, indicates that the tobacco lobby fears the impact of plain packaging on cigarette sales.

Although proposals to introduce such a measure were dropped in the Queen’s speech because of unease in Downing Street and Conservative fears of the “nanny state” label, the Liberal Democrat health minister Norman Lamb last month urged the coalition to press ahead.

A spokesman for Philip Morris said: “Adult smokers and tobacco retailers in the UK face some of the strictest tobacco control regulations and pay some of the highest cigarette taxes in Europe, but typically they do not know about these policies until after they have been enacted.

“Consumers and retailers tell us that they would appreciate receiving information about public policies and government proposals that directly impact them, so we launched the Know-More website to do exactly that.

“The website focuses on issues that affect retailers and adult smokers currently and potentially in the future.”

However, anti-smoking campaigners say the emergence of such campaigns demonstrates the degree of distrust of tobacco companies.

Martin Dockrell, director of policy at Action on Smoking and Health (Ash), said: “The industry faces the same old problem that they just can’t solve – who will they find to speak for an industry that kills half its users?

“This is the latest attempt to get smokers to do the work for them. This time they seem intent on keeping tight control of the messaging.

“The industry dilemma is this: they hope to achieve more credibility by using organisations that look independent, but the more independent the spokesman, the less the tobacco companies are in control. This time they are mimicking online campaign sites like 38 Degrees, recruiting smokers as ‘netizens’, but retaining maximum control over the content.”

Philip Morris is the fourth biggest tobacco company in the UK, selling about 7% of the 4.4bn cigarettes sold each year, which means the inserts will run in potentially as many as 1.5m packets over the course of the campaign to raise awareness among its customers.

Philip Morris is not running the campaign in conjunction with the other “big four” tobacco companies – Japan Tobacco International (JTI), Imperial Tobacco and British American Tobacco – and is not a member of the trade body the Tobacco Manufacturers’ Association.

The tobacco industry has been stepping up lobbying efforts against proposed government regulations in recent months.

The JTI UK subsidiary Gallaher, which markets brands including Benson & Hedges, Silk Cut and Camel, has run a series of ads in national newspapers attacking government policy.

The ads hit out against anti-tobacco groups as well as plans for proposals including the introduction of plain packaging.

Groups including Ash and Cancer Research complained to the advertising watchdog that the content of the ads contained inaccuracies. The Advertising Standards Authority banned three ads for being misleading

E-CIGARETTES AND NHS TOBACCO POLICIES – POSITION STATEMENT by Scottish Directors of Public Health

Download PDF : E-cig NHS Tobacco Policy Statement 24-5-13

Malaysia to tighten tobacco controls

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/aec/Msia-to-tighten-tobacco-controls-30207485.html

Malaysia to tighten tobacco controls

The Star, Asia News Network June 4, 2013 1:00 am

Tar levels to be halved, seductive promotion stubbed out: minister

A slew of reforms will be introduced to tighten Malaysia’s tobacco control, including banning direct and indirect promotion of tobacco products and reducing the nicotine content in cigarettes by 2015.

Malaysia’s Health Minister S Subramaniam said the graphic health warnings on cigarette packets would also be replaced with new and bigger images which would take up half the front panel.

He said discounts on cigarette prices to customers would also be prohibited.

“We will also tighten our definition of no-smoking buildings. Smoking will be forbidden in all roofed areas, including covered walkways,” he told reporters after launching World No Tobacco Day on Friday.

Subramaniam noted that tobacco companies were very innovative in using sales as an indirect promotion gimmick, including employing attractively dressed girls to sell cigarettes.

“So it is an indirect attraction, but the intention is the [sale of] cigarettes. We want to differentiate between promotional intentions and sales intentions.”

He said large cigarette displays in convenience stores, which served as indirect advertising, would also be an area the ministry would look into.

Subramaniam discouraged any party, including non-governmental organisations, from getting direct or indirect sponsorship from tobacco companies.

He said tobacco companies should not be allowed to use corporate social responsibility (CSR) programmes as a tool to promote their brand.

“The sponsorship may be for a noble cause but we don’t agree with the source,” he said.

Subramaniam said the reduction in tar and nicotine content would be done in two phases – January 2014 and June 2015.

The current maximum allowable tar and nicotine content is 20mg and 1.5mg per cigarette respectively and will be dropped to 10mg and 1mg by 2015.

He said the ministry would make the necessary amendments to the Tobacco Control Rules and Regulation 2004, which is under the Food Act, and added that he hoped to have it gazetted by year end.

Subramaniam said he would also reopen negotiations with the Malaysian Council on Tobacco Control regarding the passing of a standalone bill on tobacco control.

Regarding the issue of cigarette smuggling, he said the ministry would work with the Customs Department and relevant agencies to tackle the problem collectively.

Malaysia’s 2011 Global Adult Tobacco Survey revealed that smoking prevalence among adults aged 15 and above were 23.1 per cent or some 4.74 million people.

Malaysia is a party to the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Framework Convention on Tobacco Control and is legally-bound to implement its articles. The WHO’s representative to Malaysia, Brunei and Singapore, Dr Graham Harrison, lauded the new measures as a further step to reduce the number of smokers and smoking-related fatalities in Malaysia

Customs swoops on illicit cigarette smuggling case in Lok Ma Chau

http://7thspace.com/headlines/438887/customs_swoops_on_illicit_cigarette_smuggling_case_in_lok_ma_chau.html

Hong Kong (HKSAR) – Hong Kong Customs swooped on an illicit cigarette smuggling case at Lok Ma Chau Control Point and seized about 1 million sticks of duty-not-paid cigarettes on board a cross-boundary lorry today (June 3).The total value of the cigarettes was about $2.5 million with a duty potential of about $1.7 million.In the operation, one 42-year-old male driver was arrested and the lorry used in the smuggling of illicit cigarettes was seized.

At about 9am, Customs officers at Lok Ma Chau Control Point intercepted a cross-boundary lorry declared to have 450 boxes of furniture, plastics and glassware on board.After X-ray examination and thorough inspection by Customs officers, about 1 million sticks of illicit cigarettes were found in 83 carton boxes, mix-loaded with other goods and concealed in the rear of the lorry.

Hong Kong Customs will continue to carry out stringent enforcement action against the smuggling of illicit cigarettes at boundary control points to protect government revenue.

Under the Import and Export Ordinance, smuggling is a serious offence. The maximum penalty is a fine of $2 million and imprisonment for seven years.

Members of the public are urged to report suspected illicit cigarette activities by calling the Customs’ 24-hour hotline 2545 6182.

Source: HKSAR Government

LETTER OF THE DAY – Tobacco smokescreen!

Published: Tuesday | June 4, 2013 0 Comments http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20130604/letters/letters1.html

THE EDITOR, Sir:

It is with dismay and bemusement that I feel compelled to respond to the curious question asked in Friday’s full-page ads from Carreras Limited: ‘What would a world with no legal tobacco industry really look like?’

The points contained in that missive are buttressed by an even more disturbing video on YouTube from British American Tobacco (BAT) titled ‘World With No Legal Tobacco Day – Be Careful What You Wish For’ online at:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcCJbxHvzhs

Carreras Ltd is a subsidiary of BAT.

It seems very clear from the pronouncements from the minister of health and the experience of other countries in terms of tobacco control that there are no plans to ban the sale of tobacco. Hence, these what-ifs are nothing more than disingenuous scare tactics from the tobacco industry.

A more relevant question would be, ‘What would the world look like with effective tobacco-control legislation?’ Here’s the scenario:

Smoking rates would decrease, more persons would quit, leading to fewer deaths and disability.

With bans on advertising sponsorship and promotion, fewer persons would start smoking, especially our youth.

Banning of smoking in public places would save many deaths annually since non-smokers are at risk from second-hand smoke.

The need for illicit trade in tobacco would be reduced because of reduced demand.

The tobacco taxes that governments receive would decline. However, so would the cost of treating tobacco-related diseases.

Governments would be able to offer better health care to their citizens and less funds would be spent on treating the health effects from smoking.

The funds used to buy tobacco could be utilised in a more effective way, entering the household income to buy food, take care of children, etc. (a pack-a-day smoker in Jamaica spends up to J$250,000 per year).

The environment would benefit tremendously from reduced smoking rates. Worldwide, it is estimated that 1.69 billion pounds of cigarette butts end up as waste in landfills each year. Cigarette butts are the most common toxic waste and the toxins can leach off into water courses, contaminating local water supplies. http://www.tobaccofreeca.com/smoking-problem/impact/environment/

The smoke from tobacco affects the greenhouse gases and leads to climate change http://www.nsra-adnf.ca/cms/file/files/pdf/factsheet.pdf

In countries that are well advanced in implementing comprehensive tobacco legislation, this scenario is already becoming a reality! Let us move forward with passing the eagerly awaited tobacco-control law in Jamaica.

COMMITTED JAMAICAN

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=vcCJbxHvzhs

YouTube – Videos from this email

ASH Daily News for 04 June 2013

enquiries@ash.org.uk

Telephone: 020 7404 0242

www.ash.org.uk

HEADLINES

Smoking parents warned of damage to children

Public Health England has launched a mass media campaign to increase awareness of the hidden dangers of smoking in homes and cars.

[includes video]


Source: Sky News – 04 June 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/11Bc5sm

Smokers cost their employers an extra £4,000 a year each, finds research

Smokers cost their employers the equivalent of around £4,000 more each year compared to non-smokers, according to new research, conducted in the USA.

The study, published in the Tobacco Control journal, found that several factors linked to the habit including absenteeism and smoking breaks resulted in greater costs to businesses.


Source: Wales Online – 04 June 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/11B9zm9

Surrey council to continue tobacco investment

The Surrey Pension Fund Board has decided to continue with the council’s current strategy of investing in tobacco companies where the fund currently has just over £11.1 million in equities and £1.5 million in fixed income corporate bonds, totalling £12.6m.


Source: This is Surrey Today – 31 May 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/11B9L4B

Thieves switch from metal to bulk cigarettes

Stealing cigarettes in bulk has become the crime of choice for hardened criminals as metal theft goes out of fashion according to the Daily Express.

See also:
– Rise in cost of cigarettes blamed as criminals target supermarkets, This Is Nottingham


Source: The Daily Express – 02 June 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/11B9PS0

Cambridgeshire: Police free to puff on e-cigarettes at work

Cambridgeshire police will allow tobacco craving officers to ‘smoke’ e-cigarettes at work, as long they don’t do so in public.


Source: Cambridge News – 04 June 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/11Ba0wN

Industry survey of GPs reveals that many identify nicotine as a harmful cigarette-smoke component

A small survey of GPs in the UK and Sweden, commissioned by British American Tobacco, revealed that some hold the view that one of the greatest health risks from smoking is nicotine.

The online survey sought to assess the knowledge, perceptions and attitudes to tobacco and nicotine products of healthcare professionals in the UK and Sweden and to understand what types of advice in relation to the use for alternative nicotine products are being offered to smokers.


Source: BrightSurf – 03 June 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/11Baa7o

Canada: Ontario wins important victory in $50bn lawsuit against tobacco firms

The Ontario government has won an important victory in a $50-billion lawsuit against tobacco manufacturers after the Ontario Court of Appeal refused to let international parent companies out of the court battle.

The province is seeking damages dating back several decades in relation to medical treatment costs for lung cancer patients.


Source: The Globe and Mail – 30 May 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/11BaeUE

Australia urges world to stand up to tobacco industry

Australia’s health minister, Jane Halton, during a session of the World Health Organisation (WHO), has urged governments around the globe to stand up to the tobacco industry, saying it was confident of victory in a new legal battle over its landmark plain packaging rules.


Source: Expatica – 31 May 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/11Baseh

WNTD does not apply in HK licensed premises Owners have no onus on them to enforce the law This MUST change

· scmp_15jun11_ns_smoke3_k_y7569_22504289.jpg

Hong Kong’s smokers still lighting up in bars

South China Morning Post

Published on South China Morning Post (http://www.scmp.com)

Home > Hong Kong’s smokers still lighting up in bars

Online Comment: dynamco Jun 4th 2013 12:10am

Macau has 75 inspectors for 576,000 population. HK has 99 spread over two shifts for 7 million population plus 133,000 visitors per day mostly from the Mainland (60% of male Mainlanders smoke) How many tourists got a ticket ? they have 21 days to pay ! the average tourist stay is less than 5 days. They last increased tobacco tax 3 years ago. A pack of Marlboro in Brisbane is HKD 139 HKD 80 in London HKD 85 in Norway, HKD 76 in Singapore and just HKD 50 here. So kids will keep on smoking as it remains affordable.
Ko Wing Man should hang his head in shame.
Liquor licenses compel landlords not to serve drunken people and
‘7. The licensee shall not permit any person to occupy or use any portion of the premises for any immoral or illegal purpose.’
which part of ‘illegal’ is not clear ?

Hong Kong’s smokers still lighting up in bars

Saturday, 01 June, 2013, 12:00am

News› Hong Kong

HEALTH

John Carney john.carney@scmp.com

Fear of fines is not enough to make cigarette fans stub out their habit, and many bars turn a blind eye to the practice to keep customers happy

You would have thought that having a smoking ban in Hong Kong would mean that World No Tobacco Day would be a big success. But yesterday, people were still happily puffing away in bars.

In 2007, the city implemented a smoking ban that applied to all indoor public places to rid the city’s bars and restaurants of cigarette smoke. Meanwhile, yesterday’s World No Tobacco Day was intended to encourage a 24-hour period of abstinence from all forms of tobacco consumption across the globe. Each year. tobacco use leads to 5.4 million deaths worldwide.

But neither the legislation nor the occasion had any effect on many of the city’s bars, whose owners blatantly ignored the ban.

Smoking legislation in Hong Kong, unlike jurisdictions elsewhere in the world, punishes smokers, not bars, for breaches. Rather than having bar-owners face the loss of their licences for failing to stop patrons from smoking, it is the individual smoker who faces prosecution. This means many bars are allowing smoking to continue.

The ban was first imposed at the start of 2007 for statutory no-smoking areas. A blanket ban on smoking in all indoor public places was introduced on July 1, 2009.

“We follow up all complaints about smoking offences received and arrange inspection to the concerned premises,” a Tobacco Control Office spokesman said.

But bars in Tsim Sha Tsui and Causeway Bay were letting customers and staff smoke freely yesterday. One owner of a TST bar was happy to let people smoke because he was not breaking the law.

“I only tell my customers that if they are caught smoking they could be fined. But by law we are doing nothing wrong. If I told my customers they couldn’t smoke, we would have to close. No one would come here,” he said.

A Causeway Bay bar owner said it was part of Chinese culture to smoke.

“No one is going to complain about smoking in here. Everyone does it,” he said.

Some bars in popular areas flout the smoking ban. In places such as Central and Wan Chai, smokers stand outside premises, but even inside these places people are lighting up because the owners are happy to turn a blind eye. This often happens in establishments above ground level.

Instead of going down to the street, customers are allowed to smoke in corridors or out of windows to save the hassle of going outside.

The Tobacco Control Office spokesman said in 2012, 600 inspections were conducted in bars and 242 fixed-penalty notices and summonses were issued to offenders. The office has 99 tobacco control inspectors to enforce the smoking ban. People caught smoking must pay a HK$1,500 fine within 21 days.

Topics:

World No Tobacco Day



Source URL (retrieved on Jun 4th 2013, 12:18am): http://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/article/1250817/hong-kongs-smokers-still-lighting-bars

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Tob Control — May 2013, Volume 22, Number e1 – TOC

http://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/content/22/e1.toc

Previous Issue

May 2013, Volume 22, Issue e1

World No Tobacco Day

[Author index]

Cover

1. Editorial

2. Research papers

Top of Form

Issue information

[Front cover][Table of contents PDF][Editorial board PDF]

Editorial

* Select this article

Recommitting to the elimination of tobacco use

o Joanna E Cohen

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e1 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2013-051154

o [Extract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

Research papers

* Select this article

Impact of national smoke-free legislation on home smoking bans: findings from the International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Project Europe Surveys

o Ute Mons,

o Gera E Nagelhout,

o Shane Allwright,

o Romain Guignard,

o Bas van den Putte,

o Marc C Willemsen,

o Geoffrey T Fong,

o Hermann Brenner,

o Martina Pötschke-Langer,

o Lutz P Breitling

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e2-e9 Published Online First: 13 February 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050131

Editor's Choice

* Select this article

The impact of changes in tobacco control funding on healthcare expenditures in California, 2012–2016

o Wendy Max,

o Hai-Yen Sung,

o James Lightwood

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e10-e15 Published Online First: 17 January 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050130

* Select this article

Hospital admissions for acute myocardial infarction before and after implementation of a comprehensive smoke-free policy in Uruguay

o Ernesto Marcelo Sebrié,

o Edgardo Sandoya,

o Andrew Hyland,

o Eduardo Bianco,

o Stanton A Glantz,

o K Michael Cummings

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e16-e20 Published Online First: 15 February 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050134

o [Abstract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

* Select this article

The Spanish tobacco tax loopholes and their consequences

o Ángel López-Nicolás,

o María Belén Cobacho,

o Esteve Fernández

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e21-e24 Published Online First: 23 May 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050344

o [Abstract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

* Select this article

The effect of tobacco control policies on smoking prevalence and smoking-attributable deaths in Ireland using the IrelandSS simulation model

o Laura M Currie,

o Kenneth Blackman,

o Luke Clancy,

o David T Levy

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e25-e32 Published Online First: 26 May 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050248

o [Abstract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

* Select this article

The influence of a smoking ban on the profitability of Belgian restaurants

o Sofie De Schoenmaker,

o Philippe Van Cauwenberge,

o Heidi Vander Bauwhede

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e33-e36 Published Online First: 29 April 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050283

o [Abstract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

* Select this article

Out of sight, out of mind? Removal of point-of-sale tobacco displays in Norway

o Janne Scheffels,

o Randi Lavik

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e37-e42 Published Online First: 7 June 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050341

o [Abstract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

Open Access

* Select this article

Cigarette packet warning labels can prevent relapse: findings from the International Tobacco Control 4-Country policy evaluation cohort study

o Timea Reka Partos,

o Ron Borland,

o Hua-H Yong,

o James Thrasher,

o David Hammond

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e43-e50 Published Online First: 25 April 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050254

o [Abstract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

* Select this article

Awareness and impact of New York City’s graphic point-of-sale tobacco health warning signs

o Micaela H Coady,

o Christina A Chan,

o Kari Auer,

o Shannon M Farley,

o Elizabeth A Kilgore,

o Susan M Kansagra

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e51-e56 Published Online First: 23 June 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050261

o [Abstract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

* Select this article

Linking mass media campaigns to pictorial warning labels on cigarette packages: a cross-sectional study to evaluate effects among Mexican smokers

o James F Thrasher,

o Nandita Murukutla,

o Rosaura Pérez-Hernández,

o Jorge Alday,

o Edna Arillo-Santillán,

o Claudia Cedillo,

o Juan Pablo Gutierrez

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e57-e65 Published Online First: 29 June 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050282

* Select this article

Evaluating the effectiveness of the US Navy and Marine Corps Tobacco Policy: an assessment of secondhand smoke exposure in US Navy submariners

o Nicholas J Yarnall,

o Linda M Hughes,

o Paul S Turnbull,

o Mark Michaud

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e66-e72 Published Online First: 7 August 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2012-050488

o [Abstract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

* Select this article

Cost and effectiveness of the nationwide government-supported Smoking Cessation Clinics in the Republic of Korea

o Jin-Kyoung Oh,

o Min Kyung Lim,

o E Hwa Yun,

o Sang Hwa Shin,

o Eun Young Park,

o Eun-Cheol Park

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e73-e77 Published Online First: 29 June 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050110

o [Abstract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

* Select this article

Impact of cigarette minimum price laws on the retail price of cigarettes in the USA

o Michael A Tynan,

o Kurt M Ribisl,

o Brett R Loomis

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e78-e85 Published Online First: 3 August 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2012-050554

o [Abstract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

* Select this article

Support for a tobacco endgame and increased regulation of the tobacco industry among New Zealand smokers: results from a National Survey

o Richard Edwards,

o Nick Wilson,

o Jo Peace,

o Deepa Weerasekera,

o George W Thomson,

o Heather Gifford

Tob Control 2013;22:e1 e86-e93 Published Online First: 25 April 2012 doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2011-050324

o [Abstract]

o [Full text]

o [PDF]

ASH Daily News for 03 June 2013

03 June 2013


enquiries@ash.org.uk

Telephone: 020 7404 0242

www.ash.org.uk

HEADLINES

Health groups dismayed by news ‘big tobacco’ funded rightwing thinktanks

The Adam Smith Institute and the Institute of Economic Affairs received money from cigarette firms, it has been revealed.

“At the current time, with a centre-right government, thinktanks which represent the libertarian right wing like the IEA and ASI are crucial players in the development of public policy,” said Deborah Arnott, chief executive of ASH.

“The government needs to take note that tobacco industry funding of such organisations completely undermines the credibility of their opposition to standard packaging,” she added. “For the government to allow its policies to be influenced by tobacco-funded think-tanks would be a breach of its legal obligations under the WHO tobacco treaty.”

“If the IEA really believes its policies are completely independent from its funding, it should have the courage of its convictions and be honest about where it gets its money from,” Arnott said.


Source: The Observer – 01 June 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/17QCMCL

UK ‘could lose tough reputation on tobacco controls’

The UK could lose its reputation as having the toughest tobacco control measures in Europe unless it introduces standardised packs for cigarettes, ASH has warned.

In recent years the UK was ranked top out of all countries in the European Union for its tough stance on smoking and tobacco.

But ASH said that there is a danger that Ireland will “snatch the crown” after Irish officials said that they will force tobacco manufacturers to use plain boxes emblazoned with graphic images under tough new laws.


Source: Yorkshire Post – 01 May 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/17QFCb6

Scotland: Campaign to ban sale of tobacco at Games

Anti-smoking activists have called for the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow to be completely tobacco-free.

ASH Scotland said that cigarettes should be banned from sale around venues and there should be a comprehensive no-smoking policy in stadiums and near sports.


Source: Herald Scotland – 31 May 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/17QEGn2

Scotland: Pregnant women to be offered smoking tests

Pregnant women are to be offered carbon monoxide monitoring to measure their exposure to cigarette smoke.

The service will be offered to all women in the early stages of pregnancy and will indicate raised levels of exposure to the gas through smoking or passive smoking.

Midwives can then refer women to stop-smoking support services, as well as additional care during the pregnancy if required.

Meanwhile, newly published European-wide research has shown that the number of attempts to quit smoking by pregnant women rose last year to 2,985, compared with 2,756 in 2011.


Source: Scotland on Sunday – 01 June 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/17QFcRZ

Russia: Smoking ban introduced in the land of the 60p pack of cigarettes

A smoking ban in some public places has come into force in Russia, a country with one of the highest smoking rates in the world.

See also:
– Russia tries to kick habit with anti-smoking law, Reuters
– Moscow passes smoking ban, Herald Scotland
– Russia’s smokers flout new tobacco ban, Medical Xpress
– Russian smoking ban comes into force, BBC News [includes video]
– Russia smoking ban takes effect, The Guardian


Source: The Independent – 02 June 2013
Link: http://ind.pn/17QGGf9

North America: Starbucks bans smoking within 25ft of stores

Starbucks has banned smoking within 25ft of its stores across the US and Canada.

The rule came into force on Saturday at 7,000 cafes owned and operated by the coffee chain.

Starbucks spokeswoman Jaime Lynn Riley said the aim was to expand the indoor no-smoking policy to the outdoor seating areas.


Source: Sovereign FM – 01 June 2013
Link: http://bit.ly/17QHgtb