Posts Tagged ‘Tobacco’

Marlboro menthol cigarettesTobacco companies defended menthol cigarettes to a U.S. advisory panel on Wednesday as health advocates called for a government ban on the popular flavoring.About 19 million Americans smoke menthol cigarettes. Health advocates say the minty flavor masks the harshness of tobacco, making it easier to start smoking and harder to quit.

Manufacturers told a Food and Drug Administration panel that adding menthol did not make a cigarette more harmful or addictive.”Overall the weight of scientific evidence indicates menthol does not change the inherent health risks of cigarette smoking,” said James Dillard, a senior vice president at Altria, which sells menthol versions of its Marlboro brand cigarettes.

The panel of outside experts is studying the health effects of menthol and is due to submit a report by March 2011. The FDA eventually could ban menthol, although some activists and industry analysts doubt that will happen. Stronger warnings or advertising limits are other possibilities.Any government action against menthol could be a blow to Lorillard, the nation’s third-largest cigarette company and maker of the top-selling menthol brand Newport.

A 2009 tobacco law banned cigarette flavors such as chocolate, clove and fruit that could lure children. But Congress exempted menthol, the most popular flavoring with about 27 percent of the cigarette market, and instead called for an FDA review.The issue is racially sensitive as blacks overwhelmingly favor menthol and suffer more from smoking-related illnesses and deaths than whites. A government survey showed 83 percent of adult black smokers chose menthol cigarettes.The American Academy of Pediatrics and others urged a ban on menthol flavoring, telling the FDA panel that it appealed to young people.

“Menthol has become the industry’s last holdout and last hope for disguising the taste of tobacco… we should not allow companies to sweeten the poison,” said Brandel France de Bravo of the National Research Center for Women & Families, a consumer group.

R.J. Reynolds said there was no evidence of greater health risks with menthol.”There is no scientific basis to treat menthol cigarettes differently than regular cigarettes,” said Michael Ogden, an official with Reynolds American unit R.J. Reynolds, which markets menthol-flavored Camels.Lorillard Senior Vice President Bill True said there was no data to show that youth smoking rates would drop if menthol cigarettes were no longer available.

Advisory committee members drafted a broad list of questions they wanted the industry to answer in time for the next public meeting, expected in a few months.The topics included lists of menthol content by brand, data on consumer perceptions of menthol’s effects and details on any marketing campaigns aimed at particular groups.The FDA will seek answers from the manufacturers and provide information to the committee, agency spokeswoman Kathleen Quinn said.(Reuters)

cigarettesA researcher at the Australian launch of research on cigarettes that allegedly contains pig’s blood. The content of pork is forbidden by Muslims is found in cigarette filters.Professor of Public Health, University of Sydney, Simon Chapman, pointed to recent research that identifies the use of section 185 of the pigs, including in the manufacture of cigarette filters.

These findings, told News.com.au Chapman said, could have an impact on the Islamic and Jewish groups.”The Jewish community will obviously assess this issue very seriously and the Islamic community will judge it very disturbing,” said Chapman, Wednesday, March 31, 2010.This discovery, says Chapman, who opened the dilapidated tobacco industry is not required to include in the composition of cigarettes. “They said,” this is our business and a trade secret. “

This pig’s blood, said Chapman, found at least one of their cigarettes sold in Greece. Ascertained pig blood used in making cigarettes.A study in the Netherlands found a pig’s blood was used to make filters more effective capture harmful chemicals before the smoke went into my throat. That is, these findings clearly do not apply to cigarettes that do not use filters.

LEONARDO DiCaprioLEONARDO DiCaprio is trying to give up smoking   but is having to do it without the help of nicotine patches!The Titanic actor  who stars in new movie Shutter Island  says his mission to ditch his beloved cigarettes is being hindered by dreams of mass murder!“When I take nicotine patches I have blood curdling nightmares of murder. Mass murders,” explains Leo. “I wake up in the middle of the night and have to take them off.“I don’t really remember my dreams that much apart from then. I don’t know what that means about me from a psychological point of view but that’s the truth.”DiCaprio, 35, recently admitted he’s a “mommy’s boy”.“She loves taking part in my life,” the actor said of his mom .”You can call me a mommy’s boy, but I think it’s cool to have her with me.”

smokers

smokers

Smokers in Scotland are being urged by a government minister to quit the habit in 2010.Shona Robison said giving up smoking was the biggest single thing anyone could do to improve their health. The public health minister’s plea comes as Holyrood is expected to ban tobacco displays in shops and cigarette vending machines later this month. Ms Robison said she hoped the new legislation would help reduce the number of young people smoking. The Bill also proposes to bring in fixed-penalty notices for retailers who sell cigarettes to under-18s.

Hospital admissions

Banning orders will prevent retailers selling cigarettes if they continually flout the law. Labour and the Liberal Democrats broadly support the plan but the Tories are opposed, in part because of what they claim is “flimsy evidence” in the link between advertising and youth smoking.

The Scottish Government said more than 60,000 quit attempts were made in 2008-09 and 23,126 people managed to kick the habit. Smoking is responsible for about 13,000 deaths and 35,500 hospital admissions each year, officials said. Smoking-related illnesses cost the NHS more than £200m a year.