UK anti-Tobacco lobby gets increasingly desperate

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bushman
Joined
Sep 22, 2004
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tsk tsk tsk...now how do we ban a completely legal product...
:grandmais



<TABLE class=storycontent cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0><TBODY><TR><TD colSpan=2>BMA urges tougher tobacco rules


</TD></TR><TR><TD class=storybody><!-- S BO --><!-- S IBYL --><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=466 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=bottom>By Nick Triggle
Health reporter, BBC News, Edinburgh
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Over a fifth of adults still smoke

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Doctors have called for a range of measures to rid the UK of smoking in a report launched at the British Medical Association conference in Edinburgh.
The BMA said it wanted to see tough restrictions on the sale of tobacco and new rules to limit the impact of films.
The report said such measures, with a particular emphasis on targeting young people, would make ensuring the UK was tobacco-free by 2035 a realistic aim.
Slightly more than a fifth of adults smoke - half the level of the 1970s. <!-- E SF -->
The report said the young were particularly susceptible. It pointed out smoking habits developed in the teenage years were often carried into adulthood.
In particular, the report called for all films and TV programmes which portray positive images of smoking to be preceded by an anti-smoking advert, and for film censors to take into account pro-smoking content when classifying films.
It also said that although the UK had quite restrictive tobacco legislation in place already, young people were susceptible to creative marketing strategies such as elaborate point-of-sale displays, attractive pack designs and brand imagery.
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It is essential that further action is taken to promote a tobacco-free lifestyle that deglamourises smoking
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Dr Vivienne Nathanson
BMA

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The BMA said a no-nonsense approach was needed - banning displays, insisting on plain packaging and setting minimum price levels.
Meanwhile, retailers should be regulated through a licensing scheme, it added.
The report comes after the age of sale for tobacco was raised from 16 to 18 last year in England, Wales and Scotland. Northern Ireland is to follow suit this year.
The respective governments have also proposed banning vending machine sales and the use of small packets, while bans are already in place across the UK on smoking in public places.
'Robust marketing'
Dr Vivienne Nathanson, the BMA's head of science and ethics, said there had been a "number of encouraging developments", but more action was still needed to end the era of smoking.
"The long-term trends for people quitting have slowed down in recent years so it is essential that further action is taken to promote a tobacco-free lifestyle that deglamourises smoking.
"Young people are surrounded by positive images of tobacco - from smoking by parents and peers, to celebrities and role models they see in the media.
"They are also exposed to robust tobacco industry marketing - all this serves to reinforce the habit as being forever cool."
Professor Gerard Hastings, of Cancer Research UK, who contributed to the report, said children would only be truly protected when "tobacco promotion and marketing in all its forms ceases to exist".
The Department of Health said it was looking at a number of measures.
A spokeswoman said: "Protecting children from smoking is a priority - taking away temptation is one way to do this." But a spokesman for the pro-smoking group Forest said removing cigarettes from public display made "absolutely no difference" and could make it the situation worse by making smoking seem more taboo and attractive to rebellious teenagers. He said the authorities would be far better to make vending machines credit card operated, while the measures for TV and films were tantamount to censorship.
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/7490368.stm
 

bushman
Joined
Sep 22, 2004
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About 75...and I'll have one heck of a cough if I'm still around.
 

bushman
Joined
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<TABLE class=storycontent cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0><TBODY><TR><TD colSpan=2>Tobacco display ban plan unveiled


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<!-- S ILIN -->Tobacco ban "makes no sense"<!-- E ILIN -->
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Plans to ban the open display of cigarettes in shops have been announced by the Scottish Government.
Public Health Minister Shona Robison said giving them "pride of place" on shelves did not fit with the drive to tackle smoking-related illness.
It is two years since Scotland led the UK in banning smoking in public places, and six months since the legal age for buying cigarettes was raised to 18.
Pro-smoking campaigners said the plans would not cut the habit. <!-- E SF -->
Ms Robison announced a series of other measures to the Scottish Parliament, which also include tobacco licensing and outlawing the sale of cigarettes in packs of 10.
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We will soon be living in a country where pornographic magazines will be on display in shops and not cigarettes
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Neil Rafferty
Forest

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Several areas of the action plan, welcomed by anti-smoking group Ash Scotland, will need to be taken forward with support from the UK Government.
Legislation is likely to be brought forward in 2009.
Ms Robison told MSPs: "Despite tobacco advertising having been banned in 2002, there are growing concerns that prominent displays of cigarettes and other tobacco products in shops and other points of sale are undermining our wider tobacco control efforts to denormalise smoking."
The minister said she recognised concern in the retail sector about banning displays, but said they were clearly being used as a promotional tool, telling parliament similar moves in other countries had not seen a dramatic impact on businesses.
HAVE YOUR SAY
This is never going to prevent smoking​
Kevin, Manchester
<!-- S ILIN -->Send us your comments
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"The protection of children and young people from the impact of tobacco must be paramount and there are instances - and this is one - when the benefits to the public health of the nation must take precedence," she said.
Smoking - one of Scotland's biggest killers - is responsible for about 13,000 deaths and 33,500 hospital admissions each year at a cost of £200m to the health service.
But hitting out at the plans, Neil Rafferty of pro-smoking group Forest, said: "We will soon be living in a country where pornographic magazines will be on display in shops and not cigarettes.
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</TD><TD class=sibtbg>GOVERNMENT SMOKING PLAN
Restrict shop display of tobacco products
Tobacco licensing scheme, including fixed fines for law-breakers
Outlaw sale of cigarettes in packs of 10
Help councils better enforce tobacco sales law
Crackdown on smuggled and counterfeit cigarettes
Move to plain packaging for cigarettes
Increase education on smoking-related risks

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"These measures are about making smokers feel bad about themselves and encouraging society to shun them until they learn to behave in a government-approved way."
But NHS public health director Laurence Gruer said the action plan was the right package of "tough but sensible" measures to tackle smoking addiction.
Ash Scotland chief executive Sheila Duffy added: "At present, nearly a quarter of adults in Scotland die early from tobacco-related diseases."
She went on: "Promotional displays in shops are one of the last bastions of tobacco marketing. Putting cigarettes out of sight will support smokers who are trying to quit and reduce the tobacco industry's influence on children."
Elspeth Lee, Cancer Research UK's head of tobacco control, said: "We strongly welcome these proposals which will help reduce the numbers of smokers and improve the health of the country now and for future generations."
The government plan was welcomed by opposition parties, although Labour public health spokesman Dr Richard Simpson warned some anti-smoking budgets were "flat lining", while the Tories' Jackson Carlaw said action to deter youngsters from taking up smoking should start with parents. The Liberal Democrats urged the government enforce the plans as soon as possible. Dr Andrew Buist, of the British Medical Association's Scottish council, urged Westminster to get behind the Scottish plan, adding: "Tackling children's addiction to tobacco is rightly a top priority for this government. A lifetime addicted to tobacco is a death sentence."
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/7412509.stm
 

bushman
Joined
Sep 22, 2004
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It's great at the minit.

In summer you can enjoy a good pint and chain smoke outside.

Enjoy it while it lasts.
 

Militant Birther
Joined
Nov 29, 2005
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Banning tobacco displays. :missingte

Only government could come up with something so dumb!

eek, I hope you're happy
 

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