Category: News This Week

  • WHO Urged to Embrace Harm Reduction

    WHO Urged to Embrace Harm Reduction

    The ninth Conference of the Parties (COP9) to the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) will operate under conditions of secrecy comparable to those of the U.N. Security Council, according to a new report by the Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction (GSTHR) titled, Fighting the Last War: The WHO and International Tobacco Control.

    The public and media are banned from attending all but one largely ceremonial opening plenary, yet millions will be affected by the decisions taken at COP9, which is scheduled to take place virtually Nov. 8–13.

    The report contends that current implementation of the FCTC is a global public health failure. In force since 2005, when there were 1.1 billion smokers around the world, the FCTC set out the principles of global tobacco control—to reduce the death and disease caused by smoking. In 2021, however, there are still 1.1 billion smokers worldwide and 8 million smoking-related deaths each year. What’s more, the number of smokers is predicted to rise, and the number of smoking-related deaths is set to top 1 billion this century.

    Change is urgently needed, and harm reduction for tobacco offers the opportunity for that change, according to the GSTHR.

    Fighting the Last War notes that while tobacco control policy has remained frozen in time, innovative noncombustible nicotine technology and supporting evidence have moved forward. Vaping devices, snus, nicotine pouches and heated-tobacco products are significantly safer than cigarettes as they deliver nicotine without combustion, according to the report’s authors. This, they argue, enables people who cannot or do not want to stop using nicotine to quit deadly smoking and switch to less risky products.

    “Just as delegates at COP26 will be discussing the world’s urgent need to stop fossil fuel combustion, the technology is now in place to ensure the end of the age of combustion for tobacco as well,” the GSTHR wrote in a press note. “A number of Parties to the FCTC, such as the United Kingdom and New Zealand, have successfully introduced tobacco harm reduction policies alongside their tobacco control regimes and have seen marked decreases in smoking rates.”

    When given accurate information about comparative risk, many smokers switch, the organization notes. Worldwide, the GSTHR estimated in 2020 that 98 million people worldwide were using safer nicotine products.

    The authors also point out that the concept of harm reduction is embedded in the WHO response to drug use and HIV/AIDS. It is explicitly named as the third pillar of tobacco control alongside demand and supply reduction in the FCTC. Yet the WHO has remained implacably opposed to harm reduction for tobacco and is increasingly viewed as having overseen a “mission creep,” which now sees international tobacco control setting its sights on prohibition for nicotine in all its forms.

    “There are concerning signs in published agenda and briefing papers that the FCTC secretariat and leadership continue to urge Parties against increasing access to, or even to prohibit, safer nicotine products,” the GSTHR wrote.

    Fighting the Last War considers the motivations—ideological, financial and historical—that have led to many global tobacco control practitioners becoming so hostile to what others see as the greatest potential public health advance in decades.

    The report argues that Parties to the FCTC need to seize back control of the COP meetings from the FCTC secretariat, which it says has become overly influential with little oversight. FCTC Parties should press for more evidence-based discussions, calling upon the widest breadth of scientific, clinical and epidemiological expertise on safer nicotine products and tobacco harm reduction, according to the authors. “This should include evidence from Parties that have implemented harm reduction policies, those involved in manufacturing safer nicotine products and the lived experience of consumers,” they wrote. “The establishment of a working group on tobacco harm reduction would offer a pragmatic route to move the FCTC toward a tobacco control regime fit for purpose in the 21st century.”

    “As global leaders prepare to make important pledges on climate change under the glare of the media spotlight at COP26, we urge them to demand more from their delegations inside the closed and unscrutinized rooms of COP9,” says Gerry Stimson, director of Knowledge-Action-Change and emeritus professor at Imperial College London. “Every day, more than one billion smokers are being failed by the international tobacco control regime. The age of combustion—for tobacco as for fossil fuels—must end.

    “Tobacco harm reduction offers new routes out for adult smokers. GSTHR estimates suggest that 98 million of them have already switched. At COP9, government delegations must seize back control and prevent the slide into outright nicotine prohibition that would see many return to smoking and many millions more never succeed in quitting.”

    “The fight to reduce eight million smoking-related deaths a year is now being actively undermined by the WHO and the international tobacco control establishment,” said report author Harry Shapiro. “Together, they are fighting the last war against the tobacco industry—to direct attention away from the evidence that safer nicotine products can make a significant contribution to reducing that death toll.”

    “If those who dominate the global tobacco control discourse were truly committed to public health imperatives, harm reduction principles and policies would be front and center,” said Ethan Nadelmann, founder of the Drug Policy Alliance. “This valuable report exposes the ways in which international institutions have turned their backs on scientific evidence and the human and political rights of hundreds of millions of people whose lives might be saved by safer nicotine products.”

    Fighting the Last War provides an insight into the dark arts of the WHO that many would find breathtaking and incomprehensible,” said Jeannie Cameron from JCIC Consulting. “It shows a concerning difference between the world’s preparations for COP26 on climate change and COP9 on tobacco. Governments need to stand up at COP9 to support tobacco harm reduction against the outdated views of the WHO.”

    The fight to reduce eight million smoking-related deaths a year is now being actively undermined by the WHO and the international tobacco control establishment. Together, they are fighting the last war against the tobacco industry—to direct attention away from the evidence that safer nicotine products can make a significant contribution to reducing that death toll.”

    “The challenge for lower and middle-income countries while fighting the last war and promoting real tobacco control is about two major issues,” said Nataliia Toropova from Healthy Initiatives. “Firstly, the current provisions of the WHO FCTC have not been properly implemented due to stretched government resources. Thus, smoking cessation programs are nonexistent, and adult smokers feel hopelessly stuck while making their numerous unsuccessful attempts to quit with no medical help or guidance provided. Secondly, the lack of a comprehensive harm reduction strategy is aggravated by a massive misinformation campaign about harm reduction products and a declared war on nicotine. Unless these two issues get tackled, unless the powerful voice of doctors becomes loud and gets heard, unless education and awareness building campaigns take place, no changes will occur, and this last war will be lost.”

  • Social Media Asked to Ban Pouch Promotions

    Social Media Asked to Ban Pouch Promotions

    Photo: Julien Eichinger

    Over 100 public health and other organizations, including the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, have called on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and Twitter to end the promotion of nicotine pouches on their platforms, including paid influencer promotion.

    In a letter to the CEOs of the respective companies, the organizations urge the social media companies to immediately update their existing advertising policies to prohibit tobacco companies from targeting youth with nicotine pouch advertisements. Content promoting nicotine pouches is not explicitly prohibited by any of the platforms’ current policies, according to the letter.

    “For years, tobacco companies have used social media platforms to advertise highly addictive products to young people,” said Matthew L. Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, in a statement. “Social media platforms have a responsibility to protect their users from the predatory marketing tactics of Big Tobacco—it’s time for Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and Twitter to end their complicity in Big Tobacco’s campaign to addict the next generation.”

  • TPB Announces Third-Quarter Results

    TPB Announces Third-Quarter Results

    Turning Point Brands reported net sales of $109.9 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2021, up 5.5 percent over that of the previous year’s third quarter. Gross profit increased 12.3 percent to $54.3 million and net income increased 49.3 percent to $13.4 million.

    “Our third quarter performance fell within our expectations with sales growth of 11 percent in our core business despite facing the headwind of Covid-related consumption and other benefits we experienced in the prior year period,” said TPB President and CEO Larry Wexler in a statement.

    “Zig-Zag had another robust quarter driven by our strategic initiatives and growth within our Canadian business. Stoker’s saw double-digit growth in our Moist Snuff Tobacco (MST) business which drove growth in the overall segment. Regarding capital deployment, we continued to repurchase our shares during the quarter and today announced an increased share repurchase authorization. We also maintain a strong balance sheet to pursue a healthy pipeline of investment opportunities. Overall, we remain optimistic about the growth prospects in our core business.”

    NewGen Products gross profit increased 22.4 percent to $13.5 million for the quarter. The segment gross margin expanded 760 basis points to 36.2 percent with the improvement partially driven by industry pricing pressure ahead of the PMTA submission deadline in the previous year comparable period.

    Wexler said he was encouraged by the U.S. Food and Drug Administrations recent decision to reconsider and place back into review the premarket tobacco product application for TPB’s proprietary vapor products, which the agency had earlier rejected.

    “I am confident that we submitted a robust application and look forward to engaging with the FDA in its review,” he said. “We continue to believe that robust regulatory oversight is a positive for the industry and we believe we are favorably positioned to leverage our strong regulatory and logistics capabilities to capitalize on an attractive long-term opportunity.”

  • Minister: Tobacco Will Remain Cash Crop

    Minister: Tobacco Will Remain Cash Crop

    Workers at a Malawi leaf processing facility prepare to unload a fresh shipment of tobacco.
    (Photo: Taco Tuinstra)

    Tobacco will remain Malawi’s cash crop for the foreseeable future, according to Minister of Agriculture Lobin Lowe. Speaking after touring Japan Tobacco International Leaf Malawi Factory, Lowe urged farmers continue their commitment to the crop, according to Malawi24.

    Citing JTI’s recent $1 million investment in maintaining its Malawi factory, Low said it is pleasing that companies consider Malawi as a leading processing country. The investment, he said, is evidence that tobacco has a bright future in Malawi.

    “If we talk of other crops, we are talking of complementing tobacco and not getting away from tobacco. This alone shows that we are still relying on tobacco in the short, medium and long term,” said Lowe.

    As global demand for cigarettes has stagnated, Malawi growers have increasingly been eying alternative crops. In May, Malawi’s president, Lazarus Chakwera, urged a switch to high-growth crops like cannabis, stating that tobacco, the country’s leading foreign exchange earner, was in terminal decline.

    While expressing confidence in tobacco, Lowe lamented farmers’ low earnings. Growers, he said, retain little money after repaying the inputs they got from tobacco companies. He also complained that the ministry did not get enough forex from tobacco sales.

    Low urged discussions between buyers, processors and the regulator to make sure that farmers are attracted to tobacco.

    JTI Managing Director John Gauna called on government to remove non-value costs in order to make Malawi’s processing facilities financially appealing.

    Gauna said that a number of tobacco processing factories have closed in the neighboring countries, and this has created an opportunity for Malawi to position itself as a competitive alternative.

    But taxes and levies in commodity processing are making Malawi unattractive, according to Gauna.

    “We boast capacity to process up to 240 million kilograms of tobacco leaf here in Malawi. But at the moment we aren’t achieving anywhere near this,” said Gauna.

    The JTI factory can process up to 50 million kg of leaf but is currently processing around 40 million kg, up from 28 million last year.

  • Tobacco Smuggling Route Used For Humans

    Tobacco Smuggling Route Used For Humans

    Seven Moroccan and Malian nationals were apprehended after using former tobacco smuggling routes for illegal immigration between Spain and France.

    A joint investigation by Spain’s Civil Guard and the French National Gendarmerie, supported by Europol, led officers to dismantle an organized crime group involved in migrant smuggling. The group is believed to have moved irregular migrants from their country of arrival to another destination within the European Union.

    “The organized crime group would firstly seek newly arrived irregular migrants in southern and eastern Spanish coastal areas such as Murcia, Alicante, Vizcaya, Guipuzcoa, Navarra and Barcelona,” Europol wrote in a press note.

    “The migrants arrived by boat from destinations in North and West Africa. Those irregular migrants would then be taken by road to France via former tobacco smuggling routes in Guipuzcoa and Navarra. The main destination point from there would be Bordeaux, France, with the organized crime group facilitating further illegal immigration from Bordeaux to countries across the European Union.”

  • FDA Rescinds Another Marketing Denial Order

    FDA Rescinds Another Marketing Denial Order

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has rescinded another marketing denial order (MDO), placing Fumizer’s flavored vapor products back under review, reports Filter. Fumizer received its MDO in September.

    This recission comes just weeks after the agency withdrew an MDO issued to Turning Point Brands (TPB).

    In a letter to Fumizer’s, the FDA stated that “upon further review of the administrative record, FDA found relevant information that was not adequately assessed previously.”

    “Specifically,” the letter states, Fumizer’s “application did contain randomized controlled trials comparing tobacco flavored ENDS [electronic nicotine-delivery systems] to flavored ENDS as well as several cross-sectional surveys evaluating patterns of use, likelihood of use and perceptions in current smokers, current ENDS users, former tobacco users and never users, which require further review.”

    The FDA has indicated that it “does not intend to initiate an enforcement action” on Fumizer’s flavored vapor products returning to the market during the new review.

    Many MDO recipients have complained that the FDA has been “shifting its goal posts,” during the review process, demanding certain studies that it did not appear to require before the PMTAs were filed.

    According to industry insiders, the most recent MDO recission demonstrates that TPB’s successful petition for review and motion for a stay wasn’t a one-off, resulting from the legal jurisdiction it was filed in.

    “A rescission in California for Fumizer is evidence of the systemic failure of the agency to ‘adequately assess’ the science and data of a wide range of small- and mid-sized applicants while giving all of their time and attention to the large companies like Juul and Reynolds,” a source told Filter

    Multiple companies have challenges their MDOs. Triton, Bidi and Gripum recently received some temporary form of stay, and My Vape Order has demanded a recission due to the fact its PMTA includes some of the same data and studies that also appears in TPB’s applications.

  • Leadership Transition at Smoke-Free Foundation

    Leadership Transition at Smoke-Free Foundation

    From left to right, Derek Yach, David Janazzo and Heidi Goldstain

    Foundation for a Smoke-Free World today announced that Derek Yach will no longer serve as president and board director. Heidi Goldstein, general counsel, and David Janazzo, chief financial officer and executive vice president of operations and finance, will serve as interim co-presidents, effective immediately, while the board conducts a search for a new president to lead the foundation and its vital mission forward.

    “After careful consideration, the board has determined that now is the right time for a new leader to guide the essential efforts of the Foundation, its team and its work with partners around the world,” said Pamela Parizek, chair of the Foundation’s board of directors, in a statement. “As we continue to take urgent action to accelerate progress toward ending smoking in this generation, we look forward to this opportunity to take the Foundation to the next level of achievement.

    “The Foundation remains squarely focused on its mission to improve global health by reducing death and disease caused by smoking, and Heidi and David, together with the rest of our talented team, will continue advancing our global research grantmaking, range of innovative programs and powerful public health collaborations without interruption.”

    Parizek continued, “On behalf of the board, I want to thank Derek for helping to establish and build the Foundation. We deeply appreciate the contributions he has made to this team’s work and to communities around the world through decades of ground-breaking efforts in tobacco control and public health. We wish him all the best.”

    “The Foundation’s ongoing work to end the world’s largest single preventable cause of death could not be more needed today,” said Yach. “I leave the Foundation with deep satisfaction that we now have an emerging cadre of hundreds of researchers, advocates and industry scientists dedicating themselves to this goal. My future efforts aim to complement them.”

  • CDC awards $35 million in contracts

    CDC awards $35 million in contracts

    Photo: Katherine Welles

    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has awarded global consulting and digital services provider ICF three contracts with a combined value of $35 million to provide digital transformation, health surveillance, data management, technical assistance and communications services to its programs.

    The agreements include a $9 million task order with the Office on Smoking and Health to provide communications, marketing and partnership engagement services, as well as research and technical assistance support on issues related to tobacco control, including the development and implementation of campaigns and the release of Surgeon General reports.

     “ICF has partnered with CDC programs for over 30 years, and we have the right people and the right skills in place to meet their complex needs—from public health research to data analytics and IT modernization to communications and citizen engagement,” said Mark Lee, ICF executive vice president and public sector lead, in a statement. “We look forward to continuing to help CDC advance the critical public health missions of its programs.”

     ICF brings together public health, health technology and technical support services to help organizations solve complex challenges. ICF’s approach combines advanced analytics, industry expertise and enterprise technologies.

  • Mexico: Nearly One in Five Cigarettes Illicit

    Mexico: Nearly One in Five Cigarettes Illicit

    Photo: Hassan

    Illicit products account for 18.8 percent of Mexico’s cigarette market, reports Mexico Daily, citing a report released by the Confederation of Industrial Chambers of Mexico (Concamin). The figure is up from just 2 percent in 2011.

    The illicit trade has cost the government an estimated MXN13.5 billion ($667 million) in uncollected excise and VAT taxes. The report added that the illicit sales create unfair competition for legitimate sellers and noted that the black market was helping to fund criminal activities, which negatively affect public security.

    Concamin said that two-thirds of illegal cigarettes do not carry the security code that proves compliance with tax regulations “Illegal cigarettes are a multidimensional problem that has become sophisticated in recent years,” it noted.” Although before there was no local production of illegal cigarettes, today we can see in the market many brands do not have the security code that the government requires through the [tax regulator] SAT. This dynamic represents two-thirds of the problem.”

    The Federal Commission for Protection Against Health Risks reported that there are more than 245 brands of illegal cigarettes in Mexico, mainly of Chinese origin, with the brands Win and Brass standing out as leaders in the cigarette contraband market, with 6.7 percent of total cigarette sales.

  • ‘MDO Rescission Not Necessarily a Precedent’

    ‘MDO Rescission Not Necessarily a Precedent’

    Photo: tashatuvango

    Even as consumer activists, vapor manufacturers and tobacco harm reduction advocates have taken heart from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s decision to rescind the marketing denial order (MDO) it had issued to Turning Point Brands (TPB), it is unclear whether that move sets a precedent, writes Alex Norcia in Filter.

    The problem, according to Norcia, is that TPB’s premarket tobacco product application is not publicly available, so that other manufacturers are left to guess how the company managed to get the agency to backtrack.

    At least 27 manufacturers and distributors, including Avail Vapor, Triton Distribution and My Vape Order (MVO), have filed petitions asking federal circuit courts to review their MDOs, according to Vaping360.

    In his article, Norcia details the travails of MVO, which on Oct. 20 petitioned a federal court of appeals for “an emergency motion for a stay pending a review and for expedited consideration” on the company’s vapor products that have been removed from the market.

    Lawyers for MVO revealed that their client had shared studies and data with TPB and other companies, essentially arguing that the company did not receive the same treatment as TPB, even though the applications contain some of the same information.