| Tobacco
Companies Secretly Raising Levels of Nicotine
Desperate
effort to hook new young smokers and prevent older ones from quitting!
New
York Times Editorial, 8/30/06 - New
York Times
While most of us thought the country
was trying to curb smoking, and the rapacious habits of the tobacco
companies, it turns out the industry has been sneakily making cigarettes
more addictive.
Evidence of what looks like an increasingly
desperate effort to hook new young smokers and prevent older ones
from quitting has been uncovered by a Massachusetts law that forces
tobacco companies to report test results showing how much nicotine
is inhaled by typical smokers of their various brands.
This week, the Massachusetts Department
of Public Health revealed that from 1998 through 2004, as public
health campaigns were mounted to curb smoking, the manufacturers
increased the amount of addictive nicotine delivered to the average
smoker by 10 percent. Of 179 cigarette brands tested in 2004, an
astonishing 166 brands fell into the state’s highest nicotine
yield range, including 59 brands that the manufacturers had labeled
“light” and 14 described as “ultra-light.”
The three most popular brands chosen by young smokers — Marlboro,
Newport and Camel — all delivered significantly more nicotine
as the years passed. Virtually all brands were found to deliver
a high enough nicotine dose to cause heavy dependence.
This trend has escaped notice because
the standard government test uses a smoking machine that fails to
mimic real-life smoking. A manufacturer, for example, can design
a cigarette that will score low in nicotine delivery to the machine
by placing tiny ventilation holes in the filter to dilute the smoke.
But in real life a smoker will often cover the vents with lips or
fingers, thereby inhaling a higher dose of nicotine. When Massachusetts
required the manufacturers to use what it considered a more realistic
method, the nicotine yields were more than twice those found on
the standard test. The Massachusetts approach may not be perfect,
but it is surely a lot more accurate than the traditional test,
which virtually all independent experts consider deficient.
It is stunning to discover how easily
this rogue industry was able to increase public consumption of nicotine
without anyone knowing about it until Massachusetts blew the whistle.
The Massachusetts report bears out the conclusions of a federal
judge in Washington, who recently concluded that the companies have
designed cigarettes to produce low nicotine readings on the standard
test while delivering enough nicotine to create and sustain addiction.
It is long past time for Congress to bring this damaging and deceitful
industry under federal regulatory control. If the companies had
to justify to the Food and Drug Administration why they should be
allowed to increase the nicotine inhaled by smokers, you can bet
they wouldn’t even try.
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