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Stern Warnings, Scary Pictures Coming to U.S. Cigarette Packs
August 6, 2009

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News Summary

Cigarette packs in the U.S. will soon feature blunter health warnings and graphic images of body parts riddled with cancer and other diseases associated with smoking, thanks to the tobacco-regulation bill recently passed by Congress and signed by President Obama.

The Washington Post reported Aug. 4 that the legislation requires health warnings to spread over at least half of cigarette packs, including definitive messages such as "Cigarettes cause fatal lung disease," "Tobacco smoke can harm your children," and "Smoking can kill you."

Similarly strong warnings and images are already a feature of cigarette packaging in Canada and more than two dozen other nations. Images that have been deemed especially effective include a photo of a cancer-ravaged mouth from Canada and a photo of a diseased lung from Malaysia. In Brazil, some cigarette packs show a picture of a dead fetus next to cigarette butts.

Gangrenous feet and throats pierced by holes also have appeared on cigarette packs. "The health effects of smoking are inherently hard and frightening," said David Hammond, a researcher from the Department of Health Studies at the University of Waterloo in Ontario. "Lung cancer is not a pretty disease. Mouth cancer is not pretty. And any warning that falls short of communicating that probably isn't doing its job."

The World Health Organization has called on all nations to add graphic warnings to cigarette packs, but Lyle Beckwith of the U.S. Association of Convenience and Petroleum Retailing said, "We are not enthusiastic about any type of graphic image openly displayed in our stores."

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by Theresa on 06 Aug 09 06:06 PM EDT
Where oh where will all the tax dollars come from when cigarettes are outlawed? Sales are already dropping off due to the tax increases this year. My body, my decision, at least if I smoke a cigarette I am not going to get on the interstate and kill 8 people, 4 of them children because I drank alcohol. Tax abortions that kill instantly and put huge taxes on pain medications and other items people get high off on, then steal or kill to support their habits, leave smokers alone!

Posted by Mel on 07 Aug 09 09:45 AM EDT
They need to use are tax money wisely. It is peoples coice to smoke or not but we also need to need about the kids that are smoking. These graphic images are not going to help just hender use when it comes to are kids. They are going to think it's cool and whant to collect the images did anyone think of that when making this law. Use the money wisely and keep up prevention.

Posted by Betsey on 07 Aug 09 09:57 AM EDT
Theresa, it is not "your body, your decision." If and when you develop smoking related diseases, you will expect millions of dollars worth of medical treatments to be spent on you, as your right and your due. Nicotine IS giving you a high, which is why it's as addictive as heroin. If cigarettes were made illegal, smokers would turn to crime, too!

Posted by niina on 07 Aug 09 10:29 AM EDT
Betsey "If cigarettes were made illegal, smokers would turn to crime, too!" Are you talking about the crime of rolling your own illegal tobacco in the basement of your home, or do you mean these smokers will branish guns and get the illegal packs over the border? What?

Posted by kb on 07 Aug 09 01:45 PM EDT
making the decision to smoke doesn't hurt just the smoker's body. second-, and even third-, hand smoke is responsible for 38,000 deaths of non-smokers each year (cancer.gov).

Posted by Betsey on 07 Aug 09 02:56 PM EDT
Niina, in order to obtain the illegal tobacco to "roll their own in their basment," yes, smokers absolutely would patronize dealers who absolutely would use violence to protect their turf. (Think prohibition, speak-easies, mafia.)

Posted by Brinna Nanda on 08 Aug 09 01:40 AM EDT
Graphic depictions of diseased body parts is a definite turn-off. They should have done this years ago. I think it's brilliant.

Posted by Jack on 08 Aug 09 07:40 AM EDT
As a frequent visitor to Canada, I have seen the graphic pictures and warnings on their cigarette packs for years, and, while I think they are powerful, it doesn't seem to have an impact on cigarette consumption there. In fact, it is striking that so many Canadians smoke cigarettes, despite the warnings and the fact that they have been paying over $10.00 (Canadian)per pack for cigarettes for many years.

Posted by Paul Radkowski on 11 Aug 09 08:23 AM EDT
I have found showing brain images of alcohol/drug abuse an effective deterrent for early stage users ie http://www.amenclinics.com/brain-science/spect-image-gallery/spect-atlas/images-of-alcohol-and-drug-abuse/ Showing graphic images on cigarette packages is just showing what tends to be a (longer term)"natural consequence" to engaging in such behaviour and therefore creating a negative association (in the present) with smoking. My belief of (graphically) showing the risk & consequences is providing the potential consumer/child with a more informed choice.

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