All tobacco products will display approved pictorial warnings from 30 November 2008 issued by the Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Awful images of sick lungs will appear on cigarette, bidi and gutkha packets, covering 40 per cent of the surface area of the tobacco packets, with the words: ‘Tobacco kills/Smoking kills’. The warnings were finally approved by a Group of Ministers (GoM). The tobacco industry has three months time to put up the pictorial warnings.
The realization of pictorial warnings on tobacco products in India was planned for February 2007. The GoM formed in 2007 by the Government of India had a task to review the pictorial warnings on tobacco products. This GoM did not accept the pictorial warnings (skull and bones) on these products, rather picked up weaker warnings. The GoM had approved two mild images of a scorpion signal depicting cancer or an x-ray plate of a man suffering from lung cancer.
Several nations have fulfilled strong health warning label requirements. Examples include:
- Canada, whose health minister recently proposed enlarging the labels from 30% of the package face to 60%.
- Singapore, South Africa and Poland also require strong warning labels.
- Thailand, which has added the message “SMOKING CAUSES IMPOTENCE” to its list of required warnings.
- Australia, which was the first nation to require that “how to quit” information be printed on every pack.
These pictorial warnings provide smokers with useful information on the health effects. The tobacco industry is continuing its decades-long strategy of trying to minimize the effectiveness of package warnings. Also package warnings on tobacco products are a good public health strategy because the cost of package warnings is paid for by tobacco companies, not government. These pictorial warnings will get enforced from November 30.
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Anti-Smoking Warnings Make You Want to Smoke, Claims Study
New Book From Martin Lindstrom Explores How Subconscious Affects Buying Decisions\.....Mr. Lindstrom said one of the most surprising findings of the study involved warning labels placed on cigarette packs. When project researchers asked test subjects if the warning labels worked, most said "yes." These were the subjects' conscious answers. But their subconscious answers told a different story. When researchers repeated the same question and flashed images of the labels while subjects underwent an fMRI, the images activated "craving spots" in the brain, indicating that the warnings made the smokers want to smoke more, not less.
In a different study, researchers found that anti-smoking ads had the same counterintuitive effect.
http://adage.com/article?article_id=131905
Way to promote the continuation of smoking!!
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