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worldlungfoundation.org
Please
allow
this
letter
to
serve
as
the
official
submission
of
comments
from
World
Lung
Foundation
to
the
Food
and
Drug
Administration
regarding
Docket
No
FDA-‐
2011-‐N-‐0867
concerning
Harmful
and
Potentially
Harmful
Constituents
in
Tobacco
Products.
World
Lung
Foundation
is
a
non-‐profit,
public
charity
organization
registered
in
the
State
of
New
York.
Its
mission
is
to
reduce
the
toll
of
lung
disease,
which
kills
10
million
people
each
year.
The
organization’s
primary
area
of
emphasis
is
tobacco
control.
WLF
is
one
of
five
principal
partners
in
the
Bloomberg
Initiative
to
Reduce
Tobacco
Use,
a
global
effort
to
advance
tobacco
control
using
proven
interventions.
WLF
has
helped
build
capacity
in
global
tobacco
control
in
low
and
middle-‐income
countries
and
one
specific
area
of
focus
has
been
social
marketing
using
mass
media.
In
the
past
four
years,
WLF
has
developed
and
launched
80
mass
media
campaigns
across
20
countries
worldwide.
WLF
has
also
published
a
number
of
peer-‐reviewed
research
papers
supporting
the
use
of
graphic
imagery
in
mass
media
to
reduce
tobacco
consumption.
Mass
Awareness
Communications:
Focus
on
a
Few
Dangerous
Ingredients
for
Which
There
Is
Substantial
Evidence
Numerous
studies
show
that
the
use
of
new
information,
especially
of
a
strong,
emotive,
graphic
nature
can
motivate
tobacco
users
to
quit
and
can
delay
initiation
among
youth.1
There
is
also
strong
evidence
that
health
warnings
on
tobacco
products
are
powerful
motivators
of
cessation.2
Communicating
to
mass
audiences
about
some
of
the
specific,
dangerous
constituents
in
cigarettes
offers
an
opportunity
to
communicate
new
information
about
the
health
harms
associated
with
these
products.
While
there
is
an
exhaustive
list
of
the
thousands
of
complicated
chemicals
found
in
tobacco,
and
7,000
constituents
found
in
smoke
and
secondhand
smoke,3
many
of
them
are
unfamiliar
to
the
public.
There
is
a
precedent
for
selecting
a
few
chemicals
to
communicate
the
potential
risks
of
smoking
cigarettes.
Such
information
has
been
used
in
behavior
change
campaigns
and
on
cigarette
pack
warnings
globally.
We
recommend
that
if
a
mass
awareness
campaign
is
tried
as
a
strategy
to
communicate
the
ingredients
and
their
harms
that
this
more
focused
approach
is
employed.
Several
examples
(below)
use
components
of
cigarette
ingredients
and
smoke
to
inform
about
the
dangers.
These
include
the
highly
successful
“Sponge”
campaign
from
New
South
Wales,
Australia
that
used
a
sponge
as
a
metaphor
for
lungs
and
depicted
graphically
the
amount
of
tar
a
pack
a
day
smoker
is
likely
to
ingest.
When
the
“sponge”
campaign
first
aired
in
Sydney
in
1983,
a
decrease
of
nearly
3%
was
attributed
to
this
campaign.4
The
campaign
has
since
been
run
in
a
dozen
countries,
including
China
and
Russia,
to
strong
impact.
Post
evaluation
showed
the
campaigns
increased
awareness
of
tobacco
harms.
In
India,
smokers
exposed
to
campaign
were
significantly
more
likely
to
say
that
they
intend
to
quit
in
the
future
than
those
who
were
unexposed
to
the
campaign.
(70%
vs.
66%)
We
also
include
a
new
pack
warning
from
Canada,
and
a
2002
poster
from
New
York
City
that
was
part
of
a
smoke-‐free
campaign.
In
addition,
people
who
saw
ads
from
a
2008
smoke-‐free
campaign
in
Mexico
City,
reported
higher
levels
of
understanding
of
the
toxic
ingredients
in
cigarette
smoke,
specifically
arsenic
and
ammonia.5
For
campaigns
and
for
the
warnings
on
cigarette
packs,
we
recommend
choosing
a
few
recognizable
chemicals
or
constituents
for
which
there
is
substantial
evidence
of
health
impact
and
developing
statements
that
explain
those
effects,
e.g.,
“cigarettes
contain
cyanide,
a
chemical
used
in
rat
poison”
or
“cigarettes
contain
benzene,
which
is
known
to
cause
cancer.”
This
would
be
more
likely
to
resonate
with
smokers
than
a
long
list
of
nitrosamines
compounds
most
people
know
little
or
nothing
about.
It
is
especially
important
to
use
simple,
clear
language
to
reach
across
a
wide
spectrum
of
demographic
groups,
especially
the
young,
since
most
smokers
start
to
smoke
in
early
adolescence.3
We
recommend
constructing
statements
that
can
be
understood
among
consumers
who
read
at
a
5th
grade
level.
Furthermore,
all
statements
and
content
should
be
message-‐tested
among
the
target
audiences,
as
best
practice
protocols
suggest,6,7
before
spending
is
initiated
on
printing
or
producing
materials,
especially
if
large
amounts
of
money
are
to
be
used,
for
instance
for
a
mass
media
campaign
using
television.
Making
the
Full
List
Accessible
to
the
Public
We
recommend
making
the
full
list
of
ingredients
available
on
the
FDA
website.
Each
ingredient
could
be
accompanied
by
information
about
health
impacts,
e.g.,
whether
the
substance
is
a
known
human
carcinogen
or
is
harmful
to
human
or
animal
health,
based
on
inclusive
chemical
data
sets
as
suggested
by
TPSAC.
For
context,
it
would
also
be
useful
to
list
other
products
the
chemical
is
used
in,
such
as
gasoline
or
detergent,
as
well
as
diseases
or
conditions,
the
substance
has
been
linked
to,
such
as
leukemia
or
heart
disease.
Avoid
Comparisons
and
Industry
Marketing
Comparisons
between
brands
may
unintentionally
mislead
consumers
to
conclude
that
a
brand
containing
fewer
chemicals
is
safer.
A
disclaimer
could
be
included
with
published
lists,
explaining
that
a
shorter
list
of
chemicals
found
in
one
brand
does
not
connote
a
safer
product.
In
addition,
tobacco
companies
should
not
be
allowed
to
use
confusing
marketing
terms
about
ingredients
and
constituents,
such
as
“all
natural”
or
“no
additives”
which
have
been
shown
to
confused
the
public
in
the
past.8,9
Perhaps
most
importantly
any
discussion
of
the
ingredients
and
components
of
tobacco
products
should
not
lose
sight
of
the
critical
point
that
tobacco
itself
is
an
addictive
product
that
kills
up
to
one
in
two
long-‐term
users
worldwide.10
In
the
United
States
that
includes
not
only
400,000
smokers
each
year
but
another
40,000
exposed
to
tobacco
smoke.11
Bibliography
1. National
Cancer
Institute,
The
Role
of
the
Media
in
Promoting
and
Reducing
Tobacco
Use,
Tobacco
Control
Monograph
No.
19.
2. Borland
R,
Yong
H,
Wilson
N,
Fong
GT,
et
al,
How
reactions
to
cigarette
packet
health
warnings
influence
quitting:
Findings
from
the
ITC
Four-‐
Country
Survey.
Addiction
DOI:
10.1111/j.1360-‐0443.2009.02508.
3. U.S.
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services.
How
Tobacco
Smoke
Causes
Disease:
The
Biology
and
Behavioral
Basis
for
Smoking-‐Attributable
Disease:
A
Report
of
the
Surgeon
General.
2010.
4. Dwyer
T,
Pierce
J,
Hannam,
CD,
et
al,
Evaluation
of
the
Sydney
“Quit
for
Life”
anti-‐smoking
campaign,
Part
2,
Med
J
Aust
1986;
144:344-‐7
5. Thrasher,
J.F.,
Huang,
L.,
Pérez-‐Hernández,
R.,
Niederdeppe,
J.,
Arillo-‐
Santillán,
E.,
Alday,
J.
(Feb.
2011)
Evaluation
of
a
social
marketing
campaign
to
support
Mexico
City's
comprehensive
smoke-‐free
law.
Am
J
Public
Health;101(2):328-‐35.
6. National
Cancer
Institute.
Pink
Book
-‐
Making
Health
Communication
Programs
Work.
http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/pinkbook/page1http://
7. World
Lung
Foundation,
Campaign
Resources,
www.worldlungfoundation.org/ht/d/sp/i/5835/pid/5835
8. McDaniel
PA,
Malone
RE,
American
Smokers
perceptions
of
“natural”
cigarettes
and
tobacco
industry
advertising
strategies.
Tobacco
Control
Tob
Control
2007;16:e7
doi:10.1136/tc.2006.019638
9. Brown
A,
NcNeill
A,
Mons
U,
Guignard
R,
Do
Smokers
in
Europe
think
all
cigarettes
are
equally
harmful?
European
Journal
of
Public
Heath,
vol.
22,
issue
supplement
1,
pp.
35-‐40
10. WHO:
http://www.who.int/tobacco/mpower/mpower_report_tobacco_crisis_2008
.pdf
11. CDC
Smoking
and
Tobacco
Use
fast
facts
http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/fact_sheets/fast_facts/
File Type | application/pdf |
File Title | Microsoft Word - FDA 2011 N 0867.docx |
Author | Rebecca Perl |
File Modified | 2012-05-07 |
File Created | 2012-02-13 |