Cigarettes with health warnings could nudge smokers to butt out: researchers
VANCOUVER — Cigarettes with health warnings printed directly on them are being sold in some parts of Canada, making it the first country to adopt the regulation aimed at encouraging people to kick the habit or keep them from taking it up in the first place.
Manufacturers are required, by Tuesday, to ensure that warnings about harms such as cancer, impotence, leukemia and damage to organs are printed directly on individual cigarettes. Retailers must sell only packages with those cigarettes by July 31.
Six different warnings, in English and French, are printed in rotation on the paper around the filter of each cigarette. The wording ranges from “Tobacco smoke harms children” to “Poison in every puff.”
“It’s an innovation that’s unprecedented, and it’s going to reduce smoking,” Canadian Cancer Society senior policy analyst Rob Cunningham said in an interview. Manufacturers print their brand names on cigarettes sold in most countries, he added.