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The Australian's dissembling campaign on tobacco plain packaging
Author(s) -
Daube Mike,
Chapman Simon
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
medical journal of australia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.904
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1326-5377
pISSN - 0025-729X
DOI - 10.5694/mja14.01026
Subject(s) - citation , library science , sociology , computer science
This year marks two 50th anniversaries — the fi rst United States Surgeon General’s report on smoking and health1 and the establishment of The Australian newspaper. Fifty years on, there is literally universal acceptance of the massive harms caused by smoking — 178 governments have signed the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control — but smoking still causes 6 million deaths each year. Given the preventability of the problem, action has been distressingly slow, largely because of the power and ruthless opposition of the global tobacco industry. Expert reports have noted over the years that there is no magic bullet: a comprehensive approach including legislation and education is needed. In December 2012, legislation came into force in Australia mandating plain packaging of tobacco products, despite ferocious opposition from tobacco interests. This was recommended by the National Preventative Health Taskforce as part of a comprehensive approach, and Health Minister Nicola Roxon was explicit about the main aim: “we’re targeting people who have not yet started, and that’s the key to this plain packaging announcement — to make sure we make it less attractive for people to experiment with tobacco in the fi rst place”.2 Eighteen months later, The Australian ran a frontpage story headed “Evidence ‘world’s toughest antismoking laws’ not working: Labor’s plain packaging fails as cigarette sales rise”. This was based on a tobacco industry report, still unpublished, claiming a 0.3% increase in tobacco sales volume during 2013. The Australian’s campaign against plain packaging continued with (thus far) 14 articles, including three front pages and three editorials attacking plain packaging and its advocates, and even defending the tobacco industry’s right to advertise. The Australian failed to declare a lengthy past association between News Limited and the Philip Morris tobacco company (Rupert Murdoch was on Philip Morris’s board from 1989 to 1998), or that some of its journalists and commentators on the issue have associations with the tobacco industry-funded Institute of Public Affairs,3-5 including the author of the original article, who also has a history of attacking the “nanny state”6 and “health fascists”.7 The industry’s report remains secret, but Treasury has since published authoritative data showing that “tobacco clearances (including excise and customs duty) fell by 3.4% in 2013 relative to 2012”;8 according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics “total consumption of tobacco and cigarettes in the March quarter 2014 is the lowest ever recorded”;8 and newly released National Drug Strategy Household Survey results show that between 2010 and 2013, daily smoking rates among people aged 14 years and over “declined signifi cantly” from 15.1% to 12.8% (Box); the average number of cigarettes smoked weekly by smokers fell from 111 to 96; and the average age of starting to smoke has increased to 15.9 years.9 Australia is a small market, but plain packaging has massive global implications for an industry desperate to maintain its capacity to promote and glamorise its products. The history of tobacco control shows that when one country implements a measure previously thought diffi cult, others speedily follow. Governments committed to introducing plain packaging already include New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Ireland and possibly Proportion of Australians aged 14 years and over smoking daily, from the National Drug Strategy Household Survey 1991 to 20139