U.S. releases graphic tobacco warning labels

rockin'robin

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Dead bodies, diseased lungs and a man on a ventilator were among the graphic images for revamped U.S. tobacco labels, unveiled on Tuesday by health officials who hope the warnings will help smokers quit.

Proposed in November under a law that put the multibillion-dollar tobacco industry under the control of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the new labels must be on cigarette packages and in advertisements no later than September 2012. They represent the first change in cigarette warnings in 25 years.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg were to discuss the nine new warnings at the White House. Images of the labels were released early Tuesday at Cigarette Health Warnings .

They show images that may disturb some, including one titled "WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive," illustrated with a photograph of a man smoking a cigarette through a hole in his throat.

Others messages point out the dangers of secondhand smoke to children, tobacco's causal link to fatal lung disease, cancer, strokes, heart disease and death.

More than 221,000 Americas will be diagnosed with lung cancer in 2011, accounting for about 14 percent of all cancer cases, according to the American Cancer Society. Nearly 157,000 men and women are expected to die from lung cancer this year.

Sebelius said their goal is to stop children from starting to smoke and offer adults who want to quit some help.

"We have about 4,000 people under 18 who try their first cigarette and about 1,000 of them become permanent smokers. And that's not good for our country," she told the CBS "Early Show."

"This is really aimed at making sure kids don't start in the first place."

The 2009 Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act called for cigarette packages to include warning statements in large type covering
half of the front and back of each package and graphic images showing the health dangers of smoking.

The warnings are also to occupy the top 20 percent of every tobacco advertisement of companies such as Altria Group Inc's Philip Morris unit, Reynolds American Inc's R.J. Reynolds Tobacco unit and Lorillard Inc's Lorillard Tobacco Co.

The anti-smoking group Campaign for Tobacco Free-Kids said the images represent a dramatic change from current health warnings.

"The current warnings are more than 25 years old, go unnoticed on the side of cigarette packs and fail to effectively communicate the serious health risks of smoking," the group said.

R.J. Reynolds has challenged the legality of mandated larger and graphic warnings in a federal lawsuit.

A 1964 surgeon general's report that linked smoking to lung cancer and other diseases spurred a broad anti-smoking campaign and health warnings on cigarette packages.

U.S. releases graphic tobacco warning labels - Yahoo! News
 
O.o I wonder how the tobacco companies feel about this since it could severely hurt their business.
 
I took a photograph of a thai pack of cigarettes with a very graphic image of a cancerous mouth - when you open the pack, it's like the mouth is opening. It was truly horrific.
 
it is serious addiction is very risk on addiction tobacca not good health for your lung or bad black on your chest risk! that is not joke!
 
Raise the taxes on tobacco...

Not that effective. It cost between 10.50 to 12$ a pack here in Quebec and still people are puffing away even with the ugly graphics we have on the cigarette packs. But Thailand has the most hardcore graphics on their cigarettes:
deafcaroline-albums-thai-cigarettes-picture5121-thaicigarettes.jpg
 
Tis an addiction, it's not like you need to convince people that they should want to quit. Lots of people want to quit. Unfortunately, they are unsuccessful.
 
I am one of the lucky few who was able to quit cold turkey. I quit drinking and smoking just to marry hubby. Have smoked a couple of times in the past 18 years, but never addicted luckily. My father was such a heavy smoker for so many years, that when he tried to quit with a doctor's help, he had a heart attack. After all kinds of tests, they said his body was so used to it, that the stress of no nicotine would kill him. this was before the stuff that's out now. He started smoking at age 12 and died an 60 in 1991. He smoked filter-less cigarettes, cigars, pipes and sometimes rolled his own cigarettes.
 
heart to stroke your heart not good I research find information serious! terrible my father and mom addiction smoke also my sister,

I was 12 yrs I am quit anymore freedom!
 
I wonder if explicit graphics work. I mean, it's hard becuase people are gonna say, "But I don't see smokers with a hole in their throat" or "I Don't see smokers with that kind of teeth" - it's like reverse psychology for those losers - they think it's a conspiracy.
 
I wonder if explicit graphics work. I mean, it's hard becuase people are gonna say, "But I don't see smokers with a hole in their throat" or "I Don't see smokers with that kind of teeth" - it's like reverse psychology for those losers - they think it's a conspiracy.

Maybe those in denial, but there are plenty of smokers who are well aware of the effects and are not "losers" but are simply physically addicted and unable to quit.
 
Personally I don't think the labels chosen will do much.
 
I am one of the lucky few who was able to quit cold turkey. I quit drinking and smoking just to marry hubby. Have smoked a couple of times in the past 18 years, but never addicted luckily. My father was such a heavy smoker for so many years, that when he tried to quit with a doctor's help, he had a heart attack. After all kinds of tests, they said his body was so used to it, that the stress of no nicotine would kill him. this was before the stuff that's out now. He started smoking at age 12 and died an 60 in 1991. He smoked filter-less cigarettes, cigars, pipes and sometimes rolled his own cigarettes.

I'm the same way as you. I never was a heavy smoker even though I have smoked on and off since I was 13. I quit smoking after my heart bypass surgery at age 42.
 
I switched to the electric cigarette. That got me right off of the real cigs. All I was doing was inhaling water vapor instead. Down to 0 nicotine woohoo! :)

Best part is I control it, it doesn't control me.

My first 3 days without a real cigarette I cried, realizing I was away from it.

I'm about 6 months 100% tobacco free I'm proud :)
 
I doubt it'll make Obama to stop smoking for good
 
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