![]() |
Media release Graphic
health warnings needed to deter smokers
|
10 January 2002 |
| Back to Media Releases index |
Australia’s leading health
organisations have called on the Federal Government to adopt graphic
picture-based health warnings on cigarette packets following the
success of the health warnings in Canada. Research released today in
Canada shows that 90 per cent of smokers noticed the new warnings and
44 per cent said the graphic pictures increased their motivation to
quit. Most cigarette packets in
Canada carry full colour photographs covering half of the front and
back of the package. The pictures
include a diseased mouth, a lung tumour, a brain after a stroke, a
damaged heart, and a limp cigarette as part of an impotence warning.
Inside the package, one of 16 additional rotated messages are
required, nine of which contain tips on quitting. The Cancer Council Australia
(TCCA), the National Heart Foundation (NHF) and the Australian Medical
Association (AMA) urged the Federal Government to examine the Canadian
findings. “The Canadian experience
shows that these graphic warnings have the potential to reduce the
number of people who smoke and discourage young people from taking up
smoking,” said Denise Sullivan, Chair of TCCA’s Tobacco Issues
Committee. “Anything that makes
smoking less appealing has to be a good thing,” she said. The study by the Canadian
Cancer Society found that for a significant proportion of smokers, the
warnings increased the motivation to quit, increased the concern about
the health effects of smoking, increased awareness of the health
effects of smoking, and made the package look less attractive. The study found that fully
90% of smokers had noticed the new warnings.
Among those who noticed the warnings, specific results include: -
43%
of smokers are more concerned about the health effects of smoking
because of the new warnings -
44%
of smokers said the new warnings increased their motivation to quit
smoking, and of those who attempted to quit 38% said the warnings were
a factor in motivating them in their quit attempt -
On
one or more occasions, 21% of smokers have been tempted to have a
cigarette but decided not to because of the new warnings -
When
buying cigarettes at a store, 17% of smokers have on at least one
occasion asked for a different package of cigarettes because they did
not like the warning on the package first offered -
83%
of smokers have had people they know mention or discuss the new
warnings in conversations Maurice Swanson, Co-ordinator
of the National Heart Foundation’s Tobacco Control Programme said he
was encouraged by the Canadian findings. “These graphic health
warnings have the power to discourage smokers and they have got the
tobacco industry worried,” he said. “At least two cigarette
companies in Canada have redesigned their retail displays so that the
warnings are covered at the point of sale. Another tobacco company
tried to introduce a cigarette tin so that smokers could transfer
their cigarettes from the packet to the unmarked tin but this move has been blocked by
the Canadian Cancer Society.” The Canadian regulations have
already inspired action internationally.
Brazil has required picture-based warnings to cover 100% of the
front or back of the package effective January 31, 2002 and the
European Community has adopted a directive giving its 15 member
countries the option of using pictures. “It is time for Australia
to follow the tough Canadian approach. We have a history of leading
the world in tobacco control and we should not fall behind on this
issue,” said Dr Trevor Mudge from the Australian Medical
Association. “In
Australia, like Canada, most smokers are generally aware that smoking
is bad for you. However, smokers are less aware of the magnitude of
the risk and that is that smoking kills one in two long-term users,”
Dr Mudge said. “Smokers
are also less aware of the many specific health conditions caused by
tobacco. A new health warning system like Canada’s would leave them
in doubt as to the damage cigarettes are doing to their health.” “The
Canadian research shows a very positive response to the new health
warnings among smokers, most of whom wish they didn’t smoke with a
large proportion planning to quit in the near future,” said Todd
Harper, Executive Director of Quit Victoria and member of
TCCA ‘s Tobacco Issues Committee. Recent
research undertaken by the VicHealth Centre for Tobacco Control (VCTC)
on the reactions of Australian smokers and non-smokers to prototypes
of health warnings similar to those introduced in Canada, found a high
level of support for the introduction of similar warnings in
Australia. In
one study, over 50 % of smokers said these types of warnings would
make them more likely to quit smoking. Ron
Borland, behavioural scientist and Director of the VCTC, said current
Australian pack designs evoke imagery that is inconsistent with
cigarettes as dangerous addictive killers and current health warnings
only have a minor impact on reducing this effect. “Our
research and the Canadian research demonstrate that increasing the
size of health warnings and the use of strong graphic images that
clearly demonstrate the harm caused by tobacco have the potential to
increase the potency of health warnings and encourage smokers to
quit,” he said. To
illustrate their campaign, the CCA, the AMA and the National Heart
Foundation today ran a national press advertisement showing what a
cigarette packet could look like under a new health warning system
with the message “Words
can’t describe the harm tobacco does. That’s why we need
pictures”. Media
info: Stafford Sanders, ASH Australia
ph. (02) 9334.1823
|
|
|
Page last updated on 6/11/2001 |
||