April 28, 1986 (AP, New York): Today, a coalition of anti-smoking organizations, heath agencies, and researchers are attacking the nation's cigarette companies for failing to support the development of much safer cigarettes. Health officials complained that for many years, cigarette companies have had the technology to produce a much safer cigarette, but have failed to show any support for even the idea of manufacturing a safer product.
Also today, a class-action lawsuit was filed against Philip Morris, R.J. Reynolds, Lorillard, Brown & Williamson and Liggett, alleging that each of these companies could easily have produced a much safer cigarette that didn't contain tobacco and didn't involve combustion.
According to the lead attorney for the plaintiffs: "It is absolutely feasible for the cigarette companies to produce a product that looks exactly like a cigarette, but which contains no tobacco and doesn't rely on burning anything. Instead, such a product would merely heat a solution of vegetable glycerin in which nicotine was dissolved. The resulting aerosol would contain a few chemicals, but would be vastly safer than the tens of thousands of chemicals and more than 60 human carcinogens present in cigarette smoke."
A University of California, San Francisco professor who spoke at today's press conference stated: "This is a no-brainer. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that if you remove the tobacco and the combustion process, you're going to have a much safer product. We don't need to do 10 years of research to find that out."
Cigarette market leader Philip Morris lashed out at the anti-smoking groups, disputing their claims that a non-tobacco, non-combusted, cigarette-like product would offer any health benefits: "We have not seen to this point evidence that contradicts the idea that
putting something in your mouth, a stick-like device, and inhaling is
not risky."
A spokesperson for R.J. Reynolds noted that even if you reduce the toxic emissions by 99%, the product is still hazardous, emphasizing that with such a product, "the emissions are not merely harmless water vapor."
Lorillard actually produced and circulated a brochure entitled "Not Harmless Water Vapor" which notes that even if a safer product were to emit just a small number of chemicals, it still could be hazardous. Lead counsel for Lorillard said that he looked forward to defending his company in court, saying: "We are going to have a field day in the courtroom. We have incontrovertible evidence that the product health groups are asking us to make does not just emit harmless water vapor."
London-based British American Tobacco, the parent company of Brown and Williamson, told the Associated Press that anti-tobacco groups in the U.S. are unique in their "extreme enthusiasm" for a non-tobacco cigarette. "They're quite blind to some of the concerns that people in other countries are expressing."
The president of the American Lung Association told the AP that while some of the tobacco companies initially tested a non-nicotine, non-combusted device back in 1977, and it proved to be quite acceptable to smokers, the companies have since abandoned further development of the product.
Liggett's spokesman defended his company, arguing that these purportedly safer products "have only been around since about 1977 and that's a very, very
short period by which to determine whether they are as safe as everybody
hopes they will be." He argued that it will take years, even decades, before we understand the full spectrum of potential risks from these products.
Philip Morris added another concern - the possibility that even if these products turn out to be much safer than conventional cigarettes, they might still have a negative public health impact because they could lead kids to smoking the real thing. A Philip Morris public relations spokesman stated: "There's no question that they are a gateway to smoking tobacco cigarettes." He added that: "Many kids are starting out with these imitation products and then going
on to smoke conventional cigarettes. These allegedly healthier products are condemning many kids to struggling with a lifelong addiction to
nicotine."
When pressed to provide evidence to back up his claim, he said: "We know this because in test markets, there were many kids who used these alternative products and who also smoked. This proves that these alternative products are a gateway to smoking."
The Tobacco Institute, which represents all of the major cigarette companies, argued that the purported safer products that the anti-smoking groups are calling for would not benefit the public's health because they contain nicotine and "are as addictive as regular cigarettes."
The lead scientist in Philip Morris' research division told the AP that: "Many consumers believe that the non-tobacco, non-combusted products we tested are "safe"
tobacco products or are "safer" than cigarettes. We have not made such a
determination and conclusive research is not available."
The lead counsel for R.J. Reynolds explained that his company would be "delighted" to produce a safer substitute for cigarettes once the FDA determines that such a product is 'safe and effective.' But until then, allowing such a product to be marketed would be like "the wild, wild west."
Correction: Due to technical problems with our lithograph, the Associated Press regrets that it printed the wrong date in the above story. The date should be April 28, 2016, not April 28, 1986.
Correction: We have been notified of another inadvertent error in the above story. In every place where the name of a tobacco company is mentioned, it should be replaced with the name of an anti-tobacco group or health agency or organization. And in every place where an anti-tobacco organization or researcher is mentioned, it should be replaced with a Big Tobacco company or tobacco company researcher. We apologize for the mistake and are sorry for any confusion or misinterpretation that it caused.
Correction: The non-combusted, non-tobacco product in question was not merely test marketed. It has actually been on the market for 10 years, is being used by more than 3 million people, and has been studied in more than 50 peer-reviewed articles, many of which documented dramatic health improvement in smokers who switched to these alternative products.
Addendum: Returning our phone call too late for the print edition, Professor Michael Siegel from the Boston University School of Public Health did add the following comment:
"It seems to me that the anti-tobacco groups have provided the tobacco companies with a nearly impenetrable defense in future litigation. A huge component of the legal argument being made by plaintiff's attorneys is that the tobacco companies had the technology, and experimented with the technology to produce a much safer cigarette, but failed to do so.
Now, the companies have been provided with a new line of defense. They can simply bombard the court with abundant statements from anti-smoking groups and health officials and agencies which argue that there is no way the companies could have brought such a product to market, because - as the anti-smoking groups themselves note - it would have taken 10 years or longer to understand the potential long-term risks of such a product. Even if all the tobacco were removed and a heating process was substituted for combustion so that there was no smoke, it still would not have been harmless water vapor. Moreover, even if such a product were safer, it still could have harmed the public health by serving as a gateway to a lifetime of addiction to smoking.
Nicotine itself is harmful and causes brain damage in adolescents. And even with a truly safer product, it would not benefit the public's health because there is no question that it would be a gateway to smoking.
The bare truth is that putting something in your mouth, a stick-like device, and inhaling is
going to be risky. Thus, there would have been no definite public health advantage to creating a presumably safer product and by failing to pursue a safer cigarette, the companies therefore did not violate any public health duty of care."
Documentation of "Tobacco Company" Quotes
"We have not seen to this point evidence that contradicts the idea that
putting something in your mouth, a stick-like device, and inhaling is
not risky."
Source: Australian Medical Association
"E-cigarette emissions are not merely harmless water vapor."
Source: University of California, San Francisco
"Not Harmless Water Vapor"
Source: Vermont Department of Health
"These products do not just emit harmless water vapor."
Source: Americans for Nonsmokers' Rights
"extreme enthusiasm ... They're quite blind to some of the concerns that people in other countries are expressing. They've
only been around since about [2007] and that's a very, very
short period by which to determine whether they are as safe as everybody
hopes they will be."
Source: Professor Simon Chapman
"There's no question that they are a gateway to smoking [tobacco] cigarettes."
Source: Professor Stan Glantz
"They are just as addictive as regular cigarettes."
Source: California Department of Health Services
"Many kids are starting out with [e-cigarettes] and then going
on to smoke conventional cigarettes. [E-cigarettes] are condemning many kids to struggling with a lifelong addiction to
nicotine."
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
"Many consumers believe that [e-cigarettes] are "safe"
tobacco products or are "safer" than cigarettes. FDA has not made such a
determination and conclusive research is not available."
Source: Food and Drug Administration
"Safe and effective"
Source: American Lung Association
"Wild, wild west"
Source: American Cancer Society
...Providing the whole story behind tobacco and alcohol news.
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
Royal College of Physicians Report Recommends Widespread Promotion of Electronic Cigarettes for Smoking Cessation
Moments ago, the Royal College of Physicians released a new report that summarizes the scientific evidence on e-cigarettes and public health and concludes that these products should be widely promoted as a substitute for real tobacco cigarettes. The RCP also issued a summary statement regarding the report, which is entitled "Nicotine Without Smoke: Tobacco Harm Reduction."
The major conclusion of the report is that: "e-cigarettes are likely to be beneficial to UK public health. Smokers can therefore be reassured and encouraged to use them, and the public can be reassured that e-cigarettes are much safer than smoking."
This conclusion is based on a number of key findings:
The ultimate recommendation of the report is that electronic cigarettes should be promoted "as widely as possible" as an alternative to smoking.
The Rest of the Story
This is an outstanding report with a meticulous and balanced review of the relevant scientific literature, an enlightened perspective on the evaluation of current data on smoking and its harms, the use of nicotine replacement therapy, and the potential role of e-cigarettes, and evidence-based recommendations that aim to protect the public's health rather than to promote any particular bias or ideology.
It is also a breath of fresh air that helps to clean out some of the stench we have been getting from the completely non-evidence-based rhetoric and propaganda we have been getting for the past six years from anti-nicotine organizations and researchers in the U.S. and from numerous health agencies and regulatory bodies, including the FDA and the CDC.
The report also presents an enlightened view on regulation of vaping products, as it astutely points out that regulations must maximize the potential benefits while minimizing the potential harms of these products, rather than banning a huge segment of the products on the market, as the FDA is poised to do, and to give cigarettes a huge boost by virtually eliminating competition from a much safer alternative.
The report acknowledges that there are some potential long-term risks associated with vaping, but that these are certainly much lower than the risks of continued smoking. It also dispels the absurd assertion, widespread in the U.S., that e-cigarettes are going to re-normalize smoking. Finally, it provides strong evidence against the claim that e-cigarettes are a gateway to youth smoking and argues that vaping is actually a gateway away from smoking.
The report confirms what real-live vapers have been telling us all along, but what we in the U.S. have completely ignored because we don't "approve" of people getting any enjoyment from nicotine or improving their health through the use of a product that looks and works like a cigarette. It vindicates the vapers who have been repeatedly attacked by anti-nicotine groups in the U.S. for the past six years and hopefully, it will reassure vapers that they are truly to be congratulated and celebrated for having taken an action that will greatly improve their health and their lives.
The major conclusion of the report is that: "e-cigarettes are likely to be beneficial to UK public health. Smokers can therefore be reassured and encouraged to use them, and the public can be reassured that e-cigarettes are much safer than smoking."
This conclusion is based on a number of key findings:
- "E-cigarettes are not a gateway to smoking – in the UK, use of e-cigarettes is limited almost entirely to those who are already using, or have used, tobacco.
- E-cigarettes do not result in normalisation of smoking – there is no evidence that either nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) or e-cigarette use has resulted in renormalisation of smoking. None of these products has to date attracted significant use among adult never-smokers, or demonstrated evidence of significant gateway progression into smoking among young people.
- E-cigarettes and quitting smoking - among smokers, e-cigarette use is likely to lead to quit attempts that would not otherwise have happened, and in a proportion of these to successful cessation. In this way, e-cigarettes can act as a gateway from smoking.
- E-cigarettes and long-term harm - the possibility of some harm from long-term e-cigarette use cannot be dismissed due to inhalation of the ingredients other than nicotine, but is likely to be very small, and substantially smaller than that arising from tobacco smoking. With appropriate product standards to minimise exposure to the other ingredients, it should be possible to reduce risks of physical health still further."
"The growing use of electronic cigarettes
as a substitute for tobacco smoking has been a topic of great
controversy, with much speculation over their potential risks and
benefits. This report lays to rest almost all of the concerns over these
products, and concludes that, with sensible regulation, electronic
cigarettes have the potential to make a major contribution towards
preventing the premature death, disease and social inequalities in
health that smoking currently causes in the UK. Smokers should be reassured that these products can help them quit all tobacco use forever."
The ultimate recommendation of the report is that electronic cigarettes should be promoted "as widely as possible" as an alternative to smoking.
The Rest of the Story
This is an outstanding report with a meticulous and balanced review of the relevant scientific literature, an enlightened perspective on the evaluation of current data on smoking and its harms, the use of nicotine replacement therapy, and the potential role of e-cigarettes, and evidence-based recommendations that aim to protect the public's health rather than to promote any particular bias or ideology.
It is also a breath of fresh air that helps to clean out some of the stench we have been getting from the completely non-evidence-based rhetoric and propaganda we have been getting for the past six years from anti-nicotine organizations and researchers in the U.S. and from numerous health agencies and regulatory bodies, including the FDA and the CDC.
The report also presents an enlightened view on regulation of vaping products, as it astutely points out that regulations must maximize the potential benefits while minimizing the potential harms of these products, rather than banning a huge segment of the products on the market, as the FDA is poised to do, and to give cigarettes a huge boost by virtually eliminating competition from a much safer alternative.
The report acknowledges that there are some potential long-term risks associated with vaping, but that these are certainly much lower than the risks of continued smoking. It also dispels the absurd assertion, widespread in the U.S., that e-cigarettes are going to re-normalize smoking. Finally, it provides strong evidence against the claim that e-cigarettes are a gateway to youth smoking and argues that vaping is actually a gateway away from smoking.
The report confirms what real-live vapers have been telling us all along, but what we in the U.S. have completely ignored because we don't "approve" of people getting any enjoyment from nicotine or improving their health through the use of a product that looks and works like a cigarette. It vindicates the vapers who have been repeatedly attacked by anti-nicotine groups in the U.S. for the past six years and hopefully, it will reassure vapers that they are truly to be congratulated and celebrated for having taken an action that will greatly improve their health and their lives.
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Simultaneously Published Studies Demonstrate Severe Bias in E-Cigarette Research
In a remarkable coincidence of the publishing of two nearly identical analyses of e-cigarette advertising at the same time, the equally remarkable bias in e-cigarette research has become apparent.
The studies, published by two completely different sets of researchers, both conducted an identical analysis using an identical data set. Both studies were cross-sectional examinations of the relationship between self-reported exposure to e-cigarette advertising and current use of e-cigarettes among youth surveyed in the 2014 National Youth Tobacco Survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The first study was conducted by researchers from the University of Texas and was published in the Journal of Adolescent Health. The second study was conducted by researchers from CDC and was published in the journal Pediatrics.
In the survey, youth were asked how often they see ads or promotions for electronic cigarettes on the internet, in newspapers or magazines, in retail stores, and on television or in movies. The responses were "never," "rarely," "sometimes," "most of the time," and "always." Youth who reported seeing e-cigarette ads never or rarely were categorized as unexposed to e-cigarette advertising through a particular source.
The other variable - youth e-cigarette use - was measured through a question regarding the number of days a youth reported using e-cigarettes. Current use was defined as using e-cigarettes at least one day in the past month.
Both studies examined the association between self-reported exposure to e-cigarette marketing and current e-cigarette use using a logistic regression analysis, while controlling for gender, race/ethnicity, grade in school, and use of "other" tobacco products.
Both studies found a significant association between self-reported exposure to e-cigarette marketing and current e-cigarette use. And both concluded that e-cigarette marketing therefore appears to influence youth e-cigarette use:
Study #1: "This study highlights widespread environmental influences promoting e-cigarette use through a variety of platforms, and that these influences increase the odds that a young person might also be using e-cigarettes."
Study #2: "These findings suggest that comprehensive tobacco prevention and control strategies, including efforts to reduce youth exposure to advertising, are critical to prevent all forms of tobacco use among US youth, including e-cigarettes."
The Rest of the Story
There is a glaring limitation in both studies which render them unable to conclude, as they do, that e-cigarette marketing is likely influencing youth to use e-cigarettes. Because they are cross-sectional, it cannot be determined whether exposure to e-cigarette marketing is causing youth to use e-cigarettes or whether youth who use e-cigarettes are more likely to notice and recall exposure to e-cigarette marketing.
Given that e-cigarette advertising is not as ubiquitous as cigarette advertising used to be, this is a particular problem with these studies, and it is a more serious problem than in previous studies of the relationship between cigarette advertising and youth smoking. Many youth do not even know what e-cigarettes are, and one would expect that these kids would not pay attention to or recall exposure to e-cigarette advertising. In contrast, youth who are familiar with these products would be much more likely to notice and to recall exposure to such advertisements or promotions.
For this reason, it is not clear that these studies are even measuring e-cigarette marketing exposure. It may be that what they are really measuring is simply recall of e-cigarette marketing exposure, which may well have been equal in the "exposed" and "non-exposed" groups.
Nevertheless, both studies conclude that the e-cigarette marketing is influencing e-cigarette use rather than the other way around. The first study articulates this conclusion by stating that e-cigarette marketing "influences" youth e-cigarette use and "increases the odds" of e-cigarette use. The second study articulates this conclusion by stating that "reducing exposure" to e-cigarette advertising will "prevent" youth e-cigarette use.
Here is where the remarkable demonstration of bias is evident. Given that you cannot tell whether the e-cigarette advertising influenced youth e-cigarette use or whether youth who use e-cigarettes are more likely to notice e-cigarette marketing, you would expect that neither study would have concluded one or the other. Given these two plausible possibilities with no way to decide between them, one would not expect researchers to nevertheless choose one or the other. Remarkably, both studies articulate the conclusion that it is the marketing that is influencing the e-cigarette use.
What makes these conclusions even more remarkable is the fact that both studies acknowledge that because the studies are cross-sectional, they cannot conclude that there is a causal relationship between e-cigarette advertising and e-cigarette use:
Study #1: "the analyses were cross-sectional which prohibits causal inference."
Study #2: "data were cross-sectional, and thus, causal relationships between e-cigarette advertising and use cannot be made."
Well, if causal conclusions cannot be made, then why do both studies make causal conclusions?
I believe this is a demonstration of bias on the part of e-cigarette researchers. This has become apparent in a wide range of research on electronic cigarettes being carried out in the tobacco control movement.
That I am not the only one to perceive that the studies were drawing causal conclusions is revealed by examining the newspaper headlines associated with these studies:
Reuters: "Teens Most Drawn to E-Cigarettes by Online Ads"
NBC News: "E-Cigarette Ads Get Through to Teens"
Tech Times: "This is How Ads Lure Kids to Start Using E-Cigarettes"
Anti-tobacco groups also jumped on the bandwagon and disseminated the conclusion that e-cigarette ads are causing youth to take up vaping:
Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids: "This study provides further evidence that the irresponsible marketing of e-cigarettes, coupled with a lack of government oversight, is putting our nation’s children at risk."
Truth Initiative: "New Research Affirms Need for FDA to Regulate Online E-Cigarette Ads"
Lest one think that the research teams were working together and reached a joint decision on the causal direction, the papers make it clear that this was not the case. Both studies claim to be the first to investigate the association between e-cigarette marketing exposure and e-cigarette use, indicating that neither set of researchers knew that the other set of researchers were simultaneously conducting the same analysis:
Study #1: "To our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate the association between exposure to e-cigarette marketing from several channels and use/susceptibility of e-cigarettes using a nationally representative sample."
Study #2: "However, to date, no study has assessed the association between exposure to different sources of e-cigarette advertising and current e-cigarette use among US youth."
It is also remarkable that despite the apparent inability to draw causal conclusions, both studies conclude nevertheless that reducing youth exposure to e-cigarette marketing will prevent youth use of e-cigarettes:
Study #1: "The increasing reach and intensity of e-cigarette marketing, along with the potential for these messages to recruit adolescent users, highlights the need for regulation of marketing strategies that are used by these companies to prevent and reduce adolescent initiation of these products."
Study #2: "Given that youth use of tobacco in any form is unsafe, comprehensive tobacco prevention and control strategies, including efforts to reduce youth exposure to advertising, are critical to prevent use of all tobacco products among youth."
The question that naturally arises is what is the point of this research? If the researchers were going to conclude that e-cigarette marketing influences e-cigarette use anyway, then why do the research? The apparent drawing of a priori conclusions essentially negates the purpose of conducting research in the first place. Both studies mention the need to conduct longitudinal research to determine the causal direction. But why is that research needed if the causal conclusions have already been drawn?
Ultimately, it is my belief that the underlying explanation for the severe bias we are observing in e-cigarette research is that we in the tobacco control movement are severely threatened by e-cigarettes. We are threatened because vaping throws off all of our pre-existing perspectives and challenges our ideology. We are threatened because we didn't think of this approach to smoking cessation and so vaping threatens the status of the tobacco control movement. We are threatened because we cannot possibly acknowledge that a behavior which looks like smoking could possibly be a solution to the problem of the low efficacy of existing smoking cessation products. We are threatened because we cannot stand the idea that people may gain enjoyment from the use of nicotine in a way that actually improves their health or at least does not harm it significantly. And we are threatened because it just may be that industry innovation and marketing of industry products may actually contribute to protecting the public's health.
It can't be so. Thus, we must manufacture all the research we can to show that these products, the companies which make them, and the marketing conducted by these companies are all dangerous, wicked, and antithetical to public health.
The studies, published by two completely different sets of researchers, both conducted an identical analysis using an identical data set. Both studies were cross-sectional examinations of the relationship between self-reported exposure to e-cigarette advertising and current use of e-cigarettes among youth surveyed in the 2014 National Youth Tobacco Survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The first study was conducted by researchers from the University of Texas and was published in the Journal of Adolescent Health. The second study was conducted by researchers from CDC and was published in the journal Pediatrics.
In the survey, youth were asked how often they see ads or promotions for electronic cigarettes on the internet, in newspapers or magazines, in retail stores, and on television or in movies. The responses were "never," "rarely," "sometimes," "most of the time," and "always." Youth who reported seeing e-cigarette ads never or rarely were categorized as unexposed to e-cigarette advertising through a particular source.
The other variable - youth e-cigarette use - was measured through a question regarding the number of days a youth reported using e-cigarettes. Current use was defined as using e-cigarettes at least one day in the past month.
Both studies examined the association between self-reported exposure to e-cigarette marketing and current e-cigarette use using a logistic regression analysis, while controlling for gender, race/ethnicity, grade in school, and use of "other" tobacco products.
Both studies found a significant association between self-reported exposure to e-cigarette marketing and current e-cigarette use. And both concluded that e-cigarette marketing therefore appears to influence youth e-cigarette use:
Study #1: "This study highlights widespread environmental influences promoting e-cigarette use through a variety of platforms, and that these influences increase the odds that a young person might also be using e-cigarettes."
Study #2: "These findings suggest that comprehensive tobacco prevention and control strategies, including efforts to reduce youth exposure to advertising, are critical to prevent all forms of tobacco use among US youth, including e-cigarettes."
The Rest of the Story
There is a glaring limitation in both studies which render them unable to conclude, as they do, that e-cigarette marketing is likely influencing youth to use e-cigarettes. Because they are cross-sectional, it cannot be determined whether exposure to e-cigarette marketing is causing youth to use e-cigarettes or whether youth who use e-cigarettes are more likely to notice and recall exposure to e-cigarette marketing.
Given that e-cigarette advertising is not as ubiquitous as cigarette advertising used to be, this is a particular problem with these studies, and it is a more serious problem than in previous studies of the relationship between cigarette advertising and youth smoking. Many youth do not even know what e-cigarettes are, and one would expect that these kids would not pay attention to or recall exposure to e-cigarette advertising. In contrast, youth who are familiar with these products would be much more likely to notice and to recall exposure to such advertisements or promotions.
For this reason, it is not clear that these studies are even measuring e-cigarette marketing exposure. It may be that what they are really measuring is simply recall of e-cigarette marketing exposure, which may well have been equal in the "exposed" and "non-exposed" groups.
Nevertheless, both studies conclude that the e-cigarette marketing is influencing e-cigarette use rather than the other way around. The first study articulates this conclusion by stating that e-cigarette marketing "influences" youth e-cigarette use and "increases the odds" of e-cigarette use. The second study articulates this conclusion by stating that "reducing exposure" to e-cigarette advertising will "prevent" youth e-cigarette use.
Here is where the remarkable demonstration of bias is evident. Given that you cannot tell whether the e-cigarette advertising influenced youth e-cigarette use or whether youth who use e-cigarettes are more likely to notice e-cigarette marketing, you would expect that neither study would have concluded one or the other. Given these two plausible possibilities with no way to decide between them, one would not expect researchers to nevertheless choose one or the other. Remarkably, both studies articulate the conclusion that it is the marketing that is influencing the e-cigarette use.
What makes these conclusions even more remarkable is the fact that both studies acknowledge that because the studies are cross-sectional, they cannot conclude that there is a causal relationship between e-cigarette advertising and e-cigarette use:
Study #1: "the analyses were cross-sectional which prohibits causal inference."
Study #2: "data were cross-sectional, and thus, causal relationships between e-cigarette advertising and use cannot be made."
Well, if causal conclusions cannot be made, then why do both studies make causal conclusions?
I believe this is a demonstration of bias on the part of e-cigarette researchers. This has become apparent in a wide range of research on electronic cigarettes being carried out in the tobacco control movement.
That I am not the only one to perceive that the studies were drawing causal conclusions is revealed by examining the newspaper headlines associated with these studies:
Reuters: "Teens Most Drawn to E-Cigarettes by Online Ads"
NBC News: "E-Cigarette Ads Get Through to Teens"
Tech Times: "This is How Ads Lure Kids to Start Using E-Cigarettes"
Anti-tobacco groups also jumped on the bandwagon and disseminated the conclusion that e-cigarette ads are causing youth to take up vaping:
Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids: "This study provides further evidence that the irresponsible marketing of e-cigarettes, coupled with a lack of government oversight, is putting our nation’s children at risk."
Truth Initiative: "New Research Affirms Need for FDA to Regulate Online E-Cigarette Ads"
Lest one think that the research teams were working together and reached a joint decision on the causal direction, the papers make it clear that this was not the case. Both studies claim to be the first to investigate the association between e-cigarette marketing exposure and e-cigarette use, indicating that neither set of researchers knew that the other set of researchers were simultaneously conducting the same analysis:
Study #1: "To our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate the association between exposure to e-cigarette marketing from several channels and use/susceptibility of e-cigarettes using a nationally representative sample."
Study #2: "However, to date, no study has assessed the association between exposure to different sources of e-cigarette advertising and current e-cigarette use among US youth."
It is also remarkable that despite the apparent inability to draw causal conclusions, both studies conclude nevertheless that reducing youth exposure to e-cigarette marketing will prevent youth use of e-cigarettes:
Study #1: "The increasing reach and intensity of e-cigarette marketing, along with the potential for these messages to recruit adolescent users, highlights the need for regulation of marketing strategies that are used by these companies to prevent and reduce adolescent initiation of these products."
Study #2: "Given that youth use of tobacco in any form is unsafe, comprehensive tobacco prevention and control strategies, including efforts to reduce youth exposure to advertising, are critical to prevent use of all tobacco products among youth."
The question that naturally arises is what is the point of this research? If the researchers were going to conclude that e-cigarette marketing influences e-cigarette use anyway, then why do the research? The apparent drawing of a priori conclusions essentially negates the purpose of conducting research in the first place. Both studies mention the need to conduct longitudinal research to determine the causal direction. But why is that research needed if the causal conclusions have already been drawn?
Ultimately, it is my belief that the underlying explanation for the severe bias we are observing in e-cigarette research is that we in the tobacco control movement are severely threatened by e-cigarettes. We are threatened because vaping throws off all of our pre-existing perspectives and challenges our ideology. We are threatened because we didn't think of this approach to smoking cessation and so vaping threatens the status of the tobacco control movement. We are threatened because we cannot possibly acknowledge that a behavior which looks like smoking could possibly be a solution to the problem of the low efficacy of existing smoking cessation products. We are threatened because we cannot stand the idea that people may gain enjoyment from the use of nicotine in a way that actually improves their health or at least does not harm it significantly. And we are threatened because it just may be that industry innovation and marketing of industry products may actually contribute to protecting the public's health.
It can't be so. Thus, we must manufacture all the research we can to show that these products, the companies which make them, and the marketing conducted by these companies are all dangerous, wicked, and antithetical to public health.
Monday, April 25, 2016
DNC Chair Mistakenly Claims that Cole Amendment Will Make it Harder to Regulate E-Cigarettes
Last week, during the mark-up of the FY17 Agriculture appropriations bill, Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL)--who is Chair of the Democratic National Committee--argued that passage of an amendment (the Cole amendment) that would prohibit the FDA from requiring pre-market applications for e-cigarettes that are currently on the market would "make it harder to regulate this product."
The proposed FDA deeming regulations would require every electronic cigarette product on the market to submit a pre-market application in order to remain on the market. Such an application, which would take an estimated 5000 hours to prepare and would cost more than $300,000 per product, is not only unduly burdensome but is virtually impossible for any small business to complete successfully. The effect of the regulations would be to decimate the e-cigarette industry, eliminating all but the largest of companies from remaining in the vaping business. This would have a chilling effect on the sales and growth of vaping products, and would protect a continuing stream of high cigarette sales.
The Cole amendment would remove this requirement for e-cigarettes currently on the market to submit a pre-market application, thus allowing current products to remain on the market and preventing the destruction of the vaping industry. It would also help maintain lower rates of smoking by ensuring that the hundreds of thousands of ex-smokers who quit using e-cigarettes will continue to have access to the products which helped them to quit. If the Cole amendment does not pass, then many former smokers will return to smoking as their favored products will be removed from the market and many smokers who would otherwise have quit smoking using vaping products will not do so because of the limited options that will be available.
The Rest of the Story
It is difficult to see how any Congressmember could oppose the Cole amendment on public health grounds. How could legislation that allows vaping products to challenge cigarette profits possibly represent a good thing for the public's health? Clearly, it is by allowing cigarettes to be challenged by the much safer electronic cigarettes that the public's health can best be protected. And, as explained above, in the absence of the Cole amendment, the FDA regulations will lead to higher rates of smoking. This is obviously not in the best interests of the public's health.
Not only do those opposing the Cole amendment fail to understand that they are actually protecting cigarette sales and harming the public's health, but they also are deceiving the public when they claim--like the DNC Chair--that the Cole amendment would make it harder for the FDA to regulate e-cigarettes.
This is complete nonsense. All the amendment would do is prevent the FDA from banning the overwhelming majority of vaping products currently on the market. It would have no impact on the FDA's ability to regulate these products. The FDA would still be free to regulate product safety. In fact, the FDA would be required to regulate product safety by setting safety standards, something that the FDA is not doing in its deeming regulations.
Although the Cole amendment represents a last-gasp attempt to prevent the FDA from creating a public health disaster by destroying the vaping industry, it still does not represent the ideal solution to the problem. After all, the Cole amendment would still allow the FDA to require pre-market applications for new products introduced after the effective date of the deeming regulations. This would stifle innovation in the vaping market, thus impairing the ability of new and potentially safer and more effective products to enter the market. In this way, the Cole amendment is simply the better of two evils.
The appropriate way to regulate vaping products is not to do so through pre-market applications, which do nothing to directly make these products safer, but by directly promulgating safety standards for vaping products. As the FDA has demonstrated a lack of interest in doing this, it may be far more beneficial to place e-cigarettes under the jurisdiction of another agency that is better prepared to regulate product safety. Alternatively, the Cole amendment could be revised so that it precludes the FDA from establishing any requirement for pre-market review of vaping products and instead, requires the agency to set product safety standards.
The proposed FDA deeming regulations would require every electronic cigarette product on the market to submit a pre-market application in order to remain on the market. Such an application, which would take an estimated 5000 hours to prepare and would cost more than $300,000 per product, is not only unduly burdensome but is virtually impossible for any small business to complete successfully. The effect of the regulations would be to decimate the e-cigarette industry, eliminating all but the largest of companies from remaining in the vaping business. This would have a chilling effect on the sales and growth of vaping products, and would protect a continuing stream of high cigarette sales.
The Cole amendment would remove this requirement for e-cigarettes currently on the market to submit a pre-market application, thus allowing current products to remain on the market and preventing the destruction of the vaping industry. It would also help maintain lower rates of smoking by ensuring that the hundreds of thousands of ex-smokers who quit using e-cigarettes will continue to have access to the products which helped them to quit. If the Cole amendment does not pass, then many former smokers will return to smoking as their favored products will be removed from the market and many smokers who would otherwise have quit smoking using vaping products will not do so because of the limited options that will be available.
The Rest of the Story
It is difficult to see how any Congressmember could oppose the Cole amendment on public health grounds. How could legislation that allows vaping products to challenge cigarette profits possibly represent a good thing for the public's health? Clearly, it is by allowing cigarettes to be challenged by the much safer electronic cigarettes that the public's health can best be protected. And, as explained above, in the absence of the Cole amendment, the FDA regulations will lead to higher rates of smoking. This is obviously not in the best interests of the public's health.
Not only do those opposing the Cole amendment fail to understand that they are actually protecting cigarette sales and harming the public's health, but they also are deceiving the public when they claim--like the DNC Chair--that the Cole amendment would make it harder for the FDA to regulate e-cigarettes.
This is complete nonsense. All the amendment would do is prevent the FDA from banning the overwhelming majority of vaping products currently on the market. It would have no impact on the FDA's ability to regulate these products. The FDA would still be free to regulate product safety. In fact, the FDA would be required to regulate product safety by setting safety standards, something that the FDA is not doing in its deeming regulations.
Although the Cole amendment represents a last-gasp attempt to prevent the FDA from creating a public health disaster by destroying the vaping industry, it still does not represent the ideal solution to the problem. After all, the Cole amendment would still allow the FDA to require pre-market applications for new products introduced after the effective date of the deeming regulations. This would stifle innovation in the vaping market, thus impairing the ability of new and potentially safer and more effective products to enter the market. In this way, the Cole amendment is simply the better of two evils.
The appropriate way to regulate vaping products is not to do so through pre-market applications, which do nothing to directly make these products safer, but by directly promulgating safety standards for vaping products. As the FDA has demonstrated a lack of interest in doing this, it may be far more beneficial to place e-cigarettes under the jurisdiction of another agency that is better prepared to regulate product safety. Alternatively, the Cole amendment could be revised so that it precludes the FDA from establishing any requirement for pre-market review of vaping products and instead, requires the agency to set product safety standards.
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
A Lie A Day: Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids Wrongly Accuses Tobacco Companies of Marketing Gummy Bear E-Cigarettes
In what is rapidly becoming a tragic farce, anti-nicotine groups are now lying at a rate of at least one per day in a deliberate attempt to demonize electronic cigarettes.
Today's liar is the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, which claimed in a press release that the tobacco companies are marketing gummy bear-flavored electronic cigarettes to youth. The Campaign asked: "Why in the world is Congress helping tobacco companies lure kids with gummy bear-flavored e-cigarettes?"
The Rest of the Story
The rest of the story is that, as I said yesterday, you simply cannot trust anything you hear from anti-nicotine groups these days about electronic cigarettes. They are incapable of simply telling the truth.
Here, the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids falsely claims that Big Tobacco is marketing gummy bear e-cigarettes to youth. But the truth is that the tobacco companies do not even produce gummy bear e-cigarettes. Those products are being marketed by independent vaping companies that are not associated with Big Tobacco.
In the U.S., here are the flavors being sold by the major tobacco companies:
Mark Ten: Classic, Menthol, Fusion, Winter Mint
Vuse: Tobacco, Menthol, Mint, Chai, Berry, Crema
Blu: Tobacco, Menthol, Cherry, Vanilla, Pina Colada, Peach Schnapps, Carolina Bold
You'll notice that Gummy Bear is not a flavored being marketed by any tobacco company in the U.S.
So why is the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids lying?
Simply put, because the actual facts do not support the pre-written script that the Campaign has created. They want to be able to attack Big Tobacco for targeting kids with outrageous flavors like gummy bear and cotton candy, yet these companies don't even make products with such flavors. So there's only one way out of this conundrum, and that's to lie.
And that's something the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids is doing a wonderful job of.
Today's liar is the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, which claimed in a press release that the tobacco companies are marketing gummy bear-flavored electronic cigarettes to youth. The Campaign asked: "Why in the world is Congress helping tobacco companies lure kids with gummy bear-flavored e-cigarettes?"
The Rest of the Story
The rest of the story is that, as I said yesterday, you simply cannot trust anything you hear from anti-nicotine groups these days about electronic cigarettes. They are incapable of simply telling the truth.
Here, the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids falsely claims that Big Tobacco is marketing gummy bear e-cigarettes to youth. But the truth is that the tobacco companies do not even produce gummy bear e-cigarettes. Those products are being marketed by independent vaping companies that are not associated with Big Tobacco.
In the U.S., here are the flavors being sold by the major tobacco companies:
Mark Ten: Classic, Menthol, Fusion, Winter Mint
Vuse: Tobacco, Menthol, Mint, Chai, Berry, Crema
Blu: Tobacco, Menthol, Cherry, Vanilla, Pina Colada, Peach Schnapps, Carolina Bold
You'll notice that Gummy Bear is not a flavored being marketed by any tobacco company in the U.S.
So why is the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids lying?
Simply put, because the actual facts do not support the pre-written script that the Campaign has created. They want to be able to attack Big Tobacco for targeting kids with outrageous flavors like gummy bear and cotton candy, yet these companies don't even make products with such flavors. So there's only one way out of this conundrum, and that's to lie.
And that's something the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids is doing a wonderful job of.
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Anti-Smoking Groups are Not Capable of Telling the Truth; Now They're Telling Vapers that E-Cigarette Aerosol Contains Propylene Oxide, a Carcinogen
I have come to the conclusion that anti-smoking groups are simply not capable of telling the public the truth about electronic cigarettes and their health effects. From the "popcorn lung" scare to the formaldehyde scare, it has been one lie after another. And today, we can add yet another one.
Anti-vaping researchers and anti-smoking groups are now spreading the false information that when heated and vaporized, propylene glycol is converted into propylene oxide, which is recognized as a carcinogen.
For example, the Kenosha Racine and Walworth Counties Tobacco-Free Coalition claims that "Once heated into the vaporized form, propylene glycol is chemically changed into propylene oxide, which is a class 2B carcinogen as rated by the International Agency for Research."
The source of that claim was apparently an article from the always reliable Gizmodo.com, which stated: "when heated above a certain temperature, PG will convert to propylene oxide—a class 2B carcinogen as rated by the International Agency for Research."
Where did that claim come from? It appears to have come from a Popular Science article, which stated: "Furthermore, when heated and vaporized, propylene glycol--often used in e-cigarettes to form aerosol particles--can form propylene oxide, a recognized carcinogen."
And where did that claim come from? Alas, from an article written by Dr. Stan Glantz, which stated that: "When heated and vaporized, propylene glycol can form propylene oxide, an International Agency for Research on Cancer class 2B carcinogen... ."
So what was the original source of this claim? Dr. Glantz apparently got it from a research article which noted that under certain conditions, heating propylene glycol can result in the formation of propylene oxide.
The Rest of the Story
The problem is that there is something which Dr. Glantz and his colleagues are hiding and which the anti-smoking groups in Kenosha, Racine, and Walworth counties are also failing to reveal:
The "certain conditions" under which propylene glycol can be converted to propylene oxide are quite simple:
Since propylene glycol boils at 371 degrees Fahrenheit, and since e-liquids are not heated above that temperature (or even close to it), these conditions can never actually be reached in the vaping process. Therefore, it is simply untrue that when heated in a vaping device, propylene glycol is converted into propylene oxide, a recognized carcinogen.
On the other hand, what Dr. Glantz and the anti-smoking groups are also hiding from you is the fact that in contrast to electronic cigarette vapor, propylene oxide is present in tobacco smoke. The temperature at the end of a burning cigarette can easily exceed 980 degrees Fahrenheit, and propylene oxide is a recognized constituent of tobacco smoke.
I find it quite appalling that anti-smoking groups and researchers are lying to the public about the presence of propylene oxide in e-cigarette vapor, but at the same time, failing to inform the public that this recognized class 2B carcinogen is present in tobacco smoke.
It has become apparent to me that anti-smoking groups and many researchers have lost interest in discouraging people from smoking. Instead, they are obsessively concerned with demonizing e-cigarettes. There is clearly something about the use of e-cigarettes that is driving anti-smoking advocates crazy. I have come to believe that what is driving us crazy is the possibility that maybe, just maybe, people are actually getting pleasure from nicotine in a way that isn't destructive to their health. I simply don't think this thought is something that anti-smoking groups can tolerate.
Hence, they must lie about electronic cigarettes. They must, like the CDC, insinuate that vaping products contain tobacco. They must inform the public that e-cigarettes are just as bad as real cigarettes.
The rest of the story is that vaping presents such an immense threat to the anti-tobacco movement that we are no longer capable of telling the truth. Our movement has deteriorated into a community of pathological liars who cannot stand the thought that there are smokers out there who are deriving pleasure from the use of nicotine without it killing them, and even worse, with the product actually improving their health.
Anti-vaping researchers and anti-smoking groups are now spreading the false information that when heated and vaporized, propylene glycol is converted into propylene oxide, which is recognized as a carcinogen.
For example, the Kenosha Racine and Walworth Counties Tobacco-Free Coalition claims that "Once heated into the vaporized form, propylene glycol is chemically changed into propylene oxide, which is a class 2B carcinogen as rated by the International Agency for Research."
The source of that claim was apparently an article from the always reliable Gizmodo.com, which stated: "when heated above a certain temperature, PG will convert to propylene oxide—a class 2B carcinogen as rated by the International Agency for Research."
Where did that claim come from? It appears to have come from a Popular Science article, which stated: "Furthermore, when heated and vaporized, propylene glycol--often used in e-cigarettes to form aerosol particles--can form propylene oxide, a recognized carcinogen."
And where did that claim come from? Alas, from an article written by Dr. Stan Glantz, which stated that: "When heated and vaporized, propylene glycol can form propylene oxide, an International Agency for Research on Cancer class 2B carcinogen... ."
So what was the original source of this claim? Dr. Glantz apparently got it from a research article which noted that under certain conditions, heating propylene glycol can result in the formation of propylene oxide.
The Rest of the Story
The problem is that there is something which Dr. Glantz and his colleagues are hiding and which the anti-smoking groups in Kenosha, Racine, and Walworth counties are also failing to reveal:
The "certain conditions" under which propylene glycol can be converted to propylene oxide are quite simple:
- A temperature of at least 980 degrees Fahrenheit.
Since propylene glycol boils at 371 degrees Fahrenheit, and since e-liquids are not heated above that temperature (or even close to it), these conditions can never actually be reached in the vaping process. Therefore, it is simply untrue that when heated in a vaping device, propylene glycol is converted into propylene oxide, a recognized carcinogen.
On the other hand, what Dr. Glantz and the anti-smoking groups are also hiding from you is the fact that in contrast to electronic cigarette vapor, propylene oxide is present in tobacco smoke. The temperature at the end of a burning cigarette can easily exceed 980 degrees Fahrenheit, and propylene oxide is a recognized constituent of tobacco smoke.
I find it quite appalling that anti-smoking groups and researchers are lying to the public about the presence of propylene oxide in e-cigarette vapor, but at the same time, failing to inform the public that this recognized class 2B carcinogen is present in tobacco smoke.
It has become apparent to me that anti-smoking groups and many researchers have lost interest in discouraging people from smoking. Instead, they are obsessively concerned with demonizing e-cigarettes. There is clearly something about the use of e-cigarettes that is driving anti-smoking advocates crazy. I have come to believe that what is driving us crazy is the possibility that maybe, just maybe, people are actually getting pleasure from nicotine in a way that isn't destructive to their health. I simply don't think this thought is something that anti-smoking groups can tolerate.
Hence, they must lie about electronic cigarettes. They must, like the CDC, insinuate that vaping products contain tobacco. They must inform the public that e-cigarettes are just as bad as real cigarettes.
The rest of the story is that vaping presents such an immense threat to the anti-tobacco movement that we are no longer capable of telling the truth. Our movement has deteriorated into a community of pathological liars who cannot stand the thought that there are smokers out there who are deriving pleasure from the use of nicotine without it killing them, and even worse, with the product actually improving their health.
Monday, April 18, 2016
American Thoracic Society Lies to Public, Claiming that Smoking is No More Hazardous than Vaping
One of the following is blatantly lying to the American public by telling us that smoking is no more hazardous than vaping, which involves no use of tobacco and no combustion process and has been found to dramatically improve the health of smokers who switch to these products. Guess which one.
A. The tobacco industry; or
B. The American Thoracic Society.
If you guessed A, you are wrong. The correct answer is B. In a whopping ironic twist, it is the American Thoracic Society, and not Big Tobacco, that is lying to the public and downplaying the severe health consequences of smoking.
In a press release issued last Friday, the American Thoracic Society stated as follows:
"Frank Leone, MD, chair of the ATS Tobacco Action Committee, believes the misconception that e-cigarettes are safer than traditional cigarettes is driving the trend to increased use, which puts children and other first-time users at risk for significant health problems."
The Rest of the Story
It is absolutely not a "misconception" that smoking is more hazardous than vaping, it is undeniably true.
There is abundant scientific evidence that vaping, which has caused no documented chronic disease or death in any identified individual, is safer than smoking, which kills more than 400,000 people each year, causes chronic lung disease, cardiovascular disease, and cancer, and contains more than 10,000 chemicals, of which more than 60 are proven human carcinogens.
There is no debate in the tobacco control community about this point. Even Dr. Stan Glantz - a fierce opponent of vaping - acknowledges that smoking is more hazardous than vaping.
Ironically, while the American Thoracic Society is lying to the public, the tobacco companies are telling the truth. Each of the major tobacco companies has acknowledged that smoking its cigarettes is far more dangerous than vaping.
By informing the public that smoking is no more hazardous than using a product which contains no tobacco and merely creates an aerosol by heating propylene glycol, glycerin, nicotine, and flavorings, the American Thoracic Society is dangerously undermining the public's appreciation of the severe consequences of cigarette smoking.
The misinformation that the American Thoracic Society is disseminating is damaging to the public's health. First, it may discourage people from quitting smoking - people who otherwise would have greatly improved their health by quitting smoking completely with the help of e-cigarettes. Second, it may convince ex-smokers who have quit using electronic cigarettes that they are just as well off returning to smoking than remaining ex-smokers by virtue of those electronic cigarettes.
Like the American Thoracic Society, I believe that the FDA should regulate e-cigarettes, ban the sale of these products to minors, and restrict the marketing of e-cigarettes to youth. However, unlike the American Thoracic Society, I do not believe that it is acceptable to lie to the public in order to achieve these aims. I believe that telling the truth is sufficient. There are potential health hazards associated with vaping which, although they of a much lower magnitude than those associated with smoking, still warrant regulation of these products and measures to keep them out of the hands of minors.
The American Thoracic Society is not only lying about the hazards of smoking, but it is also hiding a financial conflict of interest that is relevant to its statement and should have been disclosed in the press release. Namely, the American Thoracic Society has received financial support from two pharmaceutical companies that manufacture smoking cessation drugs: GlaxoSmithKline and Pfizer.
In fact, the American Thoracic Society readily acknowledges that it partners with the pharmaceutical industry and that its corporate partners include GlaxoSmithKline and Pfizer, along with at least nine other drug companies. Both GlaxoSmithKline and Glaxo market smoking cessation drugs. Electronic cigarettes are a direct competitor of these drugs for the smoking cessation market. Thus, taking money from these companies is a significant financial interest that should have been disclosed in the press release.
The Pfizer Corporation disclosed that it gave the American Thoracic Society $25,000 in 2015, another $25,000 in 2014, another $50,000 in 2013, $215,000 in 2012, and $380,000 in 2011.
On an individual level, Dr. Leone has previously disclosed that he "has received commercial research grants or contracts from Pfizer, Merck, Ono, GlaxoSmithKline, and Ortho Biotech." But none of this is disclosed in the press release.
The failure to disclose this funding creates the appearance that the American Thoracic Society's statement is being influenced by its receipt of money from Big Pharma.
The rest of the story is that in 2016, it is the American Thoracic Society, and not Big Tobacco, that is deceiving the American public by lying about the relative health effects of smoking and vaping and thereby undermining the public's appreciation of the hazards of smoking. I could not possibly have predicted things would end up like this.
A. The tobacco industry; or
B. The American Thoracic Society.
If you guessed A, you are wrong. The correct answer is B. In a whopping ironic twist, it is the American Thoracic Society, and not Big Tobacco, that is lying to the public and downplaying the severe health consequences of smoking.
In a press release issued last Friday, the American Thoracic Society stated as follows:
"Frank Leone, MD, chair of the ATS Tobacco Action Committee, believes the misconception that e-cigarettes are safer than traditional cigarettes is driving the trend to increased use, which puts children and other first-time users at risk for significant health problems."
The Rest of the Story
It is absolutely not a "misconception" that smoking is more hazardous than vaping, it is undeniably true.
There is abundant scientific evidence that vaping, which has caused no documented chronic disease or death in any identified individual, is safer than smoking, which kills more than 400,000 people each year, causes chronic lung disease, cardiovascular disease, and cancer, and contains more than 10,000 chemicals, of which more than 60 are proven human carcinogens.
There is no debate in the tobacco control community about this point. Even Dr. Stan Glantz - a fierce opponent of vaping - acknowledges that smoking is more hazardous than vaping.
Ironically, while the American Thoracic Society is lying to the public, the tobacco companies are telling the truth. Each of the major tobacco companies has acknowledged that smoking its cigarettes is far more dangerous than vaping.
By informing the public that smoking is no more hazardous than using a product which contains no tobacco and merely creates an aerosol by heating propylene glycol, glycerin, nicotine, and flavorings, the American Thoracic Society is dangerously undermining the public's appreciation of the severe consequences of cigarette smoking.
The misinformation that the American Thoracic Society is disseminating is damaging to the public's health. First, it may discourage people from quitting smoking - people who otherwise would have greatly improved their health by quitting smoking completely with the help of e-cigarettes. Second, it may convince ex-smokers who have quit using electronic cigarettes that they are just as well off returning to smoking than remaining ex-smokers by virtue of those electronic cigarettes.
Like the American Thoracic Society, I believe that the FDA should regulate e-cigarettes, ban the sale of these products to minors, and restrict the marketing of e-cigarettes to youth. However, unlike the American Thoracic Society, I do not believe that it is acceptable to lie to the public in order to achieve these aims. I believe that telling the truth is sufficient. There are potential health hazards associated with vaping which, although they of a much lower magnitude than those associated with smoking, still warrant regulation of these products and measures to keep them out of the hands of minors.
The American Thoracic Society is not only lying about the hazards of smoking, but it is also hiding a financial conflict of interest that is relevant to its statement and should have been disclosed in the press release. Namely, the American Thoracic Society has received financial support from two pharmaceutical companies that manufacture smoking cessation drugs: GlaxoSmithKline and Pfizer.
In fact, the American Thoracic Society readily acknowledges that it partners with the pharmaceutical industry and that its corporate partners include GlaxoSmithKline and Pfizer, along with at least nine other drug companies. Both GlaxoSmithKline and Glaxo market smoking cessation drugs. Electronic cigarettes are a direct competitor of these drugs for the smoking cessation market. Thus, taking money from these companies is a significant financial interest that should have been disclosed in the press release.
The Pfizer Corporation disclosed that it gave the American Thoracic Society $25,000 in 2015, another $25,000 in 2014, another $50,000 in 2013, $215,000 in 2012, and $380,000 in 2011.
On an individual level, Dr. Leone has previously disclosed that he "has received commercial research grants or contracts from Pfizer, Merck, Ono, GlaxoSmithKline, and Ortho Biotech." But none of this is disclosed in the press release.
The failure to disclose this funding creates the appearance that the American Thoracic Society's statement is being influenced by its receipt of money from Big Pharma.
The rest of the story is that in 2016, it is the American Thoracic Society, and not Big Tobacco, that is deceiving the American public by lying about the relative health effects of smoking and vaping and thereby undermining the public's appreciation of the hazards of smoking. I could not possibly have predicted things would end up like this.
Friday, April 15, 2016
CDC Continues to Lie and Deceive the Public about Youth Tobacco Use
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is a critical source of health information on most public health issues, but sadly, it is no longer a trustworthy source of information about youth tobacco use. The agency has been consumed by an obsessive vendetta against electronic cigarettes, which has blinded it to the severe problem of youth smoking and distorted its vision away from the protection of the public's health and towards the articulation of an ideology that shows a complete disregard for the health of our nation's youth.
The CDC's lack of honesty, transparency, and integrity when it comes to the issue of youth tobacco use was further demonstrated yesterday by its public claim that youth tobacco use has remained unchanged since 2011, despite the fact that its own report - also released yesterday - revealed that smoking among high school youth declined from 15.8% to 9.3% during the period 2011-2015, smokeless tobacco use decreased from 7.9% to 6.0%, cigar use declined from 11.6% to 8.6%, pipe tobacco use declined from 4.0% to 1.0%, and bidi use dropped from 2.0% to 0.6%.
With declines in all of these categories of tobacco use, how is it possible for the CDC to claim that the use of tobacco has actually stayed the same from 2011 to 2015?
Very easy. You just lie.
And that's exactly what the CDC did.
Rather than acknowledge the truth - which is that despite a dramatic increase in experimentation with vaping among youth over the past 5 years, smoking rates and the use of other forms of tobacco (other than hookah) has declined substantially, the CDC has distorted the truth by falsely telling the public that e-cigarettes contain tobacco and that when kids vape they are using tobacco. Through this deceptive and fraudulent manipulation, the agency is now able to tell the public that youth use of tobacco has stayed the same.
The Rest of the Story
The CDC's claim is categorically false. Youth use of tobacco has not stayed the same since 2011; it has dramatically declined.
To use tobacco, a youth would have to use one of the following products:
Since the overall use of the six types of tobacco by youth has declined substantially since 2011, it is simply untrue for the CDC to claim that the use of tobacco by youth has stayed the same, which is exactly what it told the public:
"No decline in overall youth tobacco use since 2011."
---Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; April 14, 2016.
"Overall tobacco use by middle and high school students has not changed since 2011...".
---Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; April 14, 2016.
The fact that for a technical legal reason (a strange definition of the term "tobacco products" in the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act of 2009), the FDA's Center for Tobacco Products is regulating (any day now) e-cigarettes as a "tobacco product" does not miraculously mean that tobacco magically appears in vaping products out of thin air. Despite what the CDC says, there is no process that observes the laws of physics which can instantly teleport tobacco into an electronic cigarette liquid or cartridge that didn't have tobacco in it when it left the manufacturing plant.
While the CDC would be deceiving the public even if it stated that youth use of "tobacco products" has remained the same, the agency is going far beyond that. It is actually claiming that the use of "tobacco" itself among youth has stayed the same. This is categorically false.
Even if the CDC argued that the use of "nicotine-containing" products among youth has remained the same since 2011, it would still be deceiving the public. According to data from the Monitoring the Future study, the majority of electronic cigarettes being used by youth do not contain any nicotine. However, the CDC is claiming - incorrectly - that all e-cigarettes used by youth contain nicotine. The Monitoring the Future findings suggest the most youth who are using e-cigarettes are sticking to the use of e-liquids that just contain flavorings, but without nicotine.
The CDC claim that "one in four high school students use tobacco" is, quite fortunately, not true. It is not even true that one in four high school students uses nicotine. What is true is that one in four high school students uses either tobacco or electronic cigarettes.
It does not seem that the CDC's claim is simply the result of a careless mistake. It has all the trappings of a deliberate attempt to deceive the public into thinking that the public health gains associated with the dramatic decline in smoking have been completely offset by the increasing rates of experimentation with electronic cigarettes.
By essentially equating the use of cigarettes (which contain tobacco) with the use of e-cigarettes (which do not), the CDC is not only undermining the public's appreciation of the severe hazards of smoking (thus taking up a role that the tobacco industry used to play), but it is also revealing that the agency actually doesn't care whether youth use real cigarettes or fake ones. They're just lumping them together: both products that kill hundreds of thousands of people, including about half of the youth who use them over many years, and products which have not been demonstrated to have any substantial health risks, and about which the worst the CDC can say is that "they are not harmless water vapor." Neither is coffee.
Apparently, to the CDC, if a youth uses an electronic cigarette, it is just as bad as that youth using a real tobacco cigarette. This shows a reckless disregard for the health of our nation's youth. Parents should be absolutely thrilled if their kids are using fake cigarettes instead of real ones. That smoking rates have declined in the presence of huge increases in e-cigarette use is a major public health victory. If all cigarette use among youth was replaced by e-cigarette experimentation, it would be a public health miracle that would save literally millions of future lives. But the CDC appears to have less interest in saving lives than it does in demonizing e-cigarettes simply because they are not just harmless water vapor.
To be clear, none of this means that we should not ban the sale of e-cigarettes to minors, discourage kids from using vaping products, regulate the marketing of e-cigarettes to youth, and educate kids about the potential health risks and the not clearly defined potential long-term risks associated with vaping. But we can do all of the above things without lying to kids. We can do all of these things without deceiving the public into thinking that electronic cigarettes contain tobacco when they do not.
In fact, by not being straightforward with our nation's youth by explaining the differences between cigarettes and e-cigarettes, the difference between the vast majority of vaping products that do not contain tobacco and the few which do (such as products like the Pax vaporizer), and the differences between vaping liquids and cartridges which contain nicotine and those which do not, the CDC is squandering an opportunity to actually make a difference by reducing the risks associated with vaping among youth and reducing the risk of addiction to these products.
For six years, the CDC has been scaring youth about the health effects of e-cigarette use, yet its campaign is not working: as the CDC itself documents, e-cigarette use continues to skyrocket. Clearly, this approach is not working. Telling the kids the truth would be the first step towards an effective strategy to confront the problem. Furthermore, such an approach would not have the adverse effect of undoing years of public education about the severe health hazards caused by smoking.
For those who think I am exaggerating when I opine that the public has less appreciation of the severe hazards of smoking than in the past, consider the scientific evidence: less than half of the public understands that smoking is more harmful than vaping, and the percentage of the public who think that smoking is no more harmful than vaping is increasing.
There are two things that the CDC has never told youth, and never told the American public either?
a. that electronic cigarettes do not contain tobacco; and
b. that electronic cigarettes are not as hazardous as tobacco cigarettes;
It is completely unnecessary, and quite damaging as well as dishonest and non-transparent, to hide this critical information from the public, and from youth. The CDC is treating youth like ignorant babies who have to have every decision made for them. Our nation's youth are actually more likely to take steps to protect themselves if they can make the decision for themselves by being fully informed about the facts. Sweeping, exaggerated, and deceptive propaganda has never worked as an approach to improving adolescent health.
Most importantly, honesty and transparency are important cornerstones in the ethical code of public health. By eschewing these principles for the sake of trying to use scare tactics, the CDC is not only violating this code, but it is risking losing the public's trust and undermining its own credibility. That would be a disaster. If people realize that the CDC is lying to them about the contents of electronic cigarettes, then the public may not trust the agency about other issues as well, and that could have disastrous outcomes.
The CDC's lack of honesty, transparency, and integrity when it comes to the issue of youth tobacco use was further demonstrated yesterday by its public claim that youth tobacco use has remained unchanged since 2011, despite the fact that its own report - also released yesterday - revealed that smoking among high school youth declined from 15.8% to 9.3% during the period 2011-2015, smokeless tobacco use decreased from 7.9% to 6.0%, cigar use declined from 11.6% to 8.6%, pipe tobacco use declined from 4.0% to 1.0%, and bidi use dropped from 2.0% to 0.6%.
With declines in all of these categories of tobacco use, how is it possible for the CDC to claim that the use of tobacco has actually stayed the same from 2011 to 2015?
Very easy. You just lie.
And that's exactly what the CDC did.
Rather than acknowledge the truth - which is that despite a dramatic increase in experimentation with vaping among youth over the past 5 years, smoking rates and the use of other forms of tobacco (other than hookah) has declined substantially, the CDC has distorted the truth by falsely telling the public that e-cigarettes contain tobacco and that when kids vape they are using tobacco. Through this deceptive and fraudulent manipulation, the agency is now able to tell the public that youth use of tobacco has stayed the same.
The Rest of the Story
The CDC's claim is categorically false. Youth use of tobacco has not stayed the same since 2011; it has dramatically declined.
To use tobacco, a youth would have to use one of the following products:
- cigarettes or cigarillos;
- smokeless tobacco;
- pipe tobacco;
- cigars;
- bidis; or
- hookah.
Since the overall use of the six types of tobacco by youth has declined substantially since 2011, it is simply untrue for the CDC to claim that the use of tobacco by youth has stayed the same, which is exactly what it told the public:
"No decline in overall youth tobacco use since 2011."
---Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; April 14, 2016.
"Overall tobacco use by middle and high school students has not changed since 2011...".
---Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; April 14, 2016.
The fact that for a technical legal reason (a strange definition of the term "tobacco products" in the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act of 2009), the FDA's Center for Tobacco Products is regulating (any day now) e-cigarettes as a "tobacco product" does not miraculously mean that tobacco magically appears in vaping products out of thin air. Despite what the CDC says, there is no process that observes the laws of physics which can instantly teleport tobacco into an electronic cigarette liquid or cartridge that didn't have tobacco in it when it left the manufacturing plant.
While the CDC would be deceiving the public even if it stated that youth use of "tobacco products" has remained the same, the agency is going far beyond that. It is actually claiming that the use of "tobacco" itself among youth has stayed the same. This is categorically false.
Even if the CDC argued that the use of "nicotine-containing" products among youth has remained the same since 2011, it would still be deceiving the public. According to data from the Monitoring the Future study, the majority of electronic cigarettes being used by youth do not contain any nicotine. However, the CDC is claiming - incorrectly - that all e-cigarettes used by youth contain nicotine. The Monitoring the Future findings suggest the most youth who are using e-cigarettes are sticking to the use of e-liquids that just contain flavorings, but without nicotine.
The CDC claim that "one in four high school students use tobacco" is, quite fortunately, not true. It is not even true that one in four high school students uses nicotine. What is true is that one in four high school students uses either tobacco or electronic cigarettes.
It does not seem that the CDC's claim is simply the result of a careless mistake. It has all the trappings of a deliberate attempt to deceive the public into thinking that the public health gains associated with the dramatic decline in smoking have been completely offset by the increasing rates of experimentation with electronic cigarettes.
By essentially equating the use of cigarettes (which contain tobacco) with the use of e-cigarettes (which do not), the CDC is not only undermining the public's appreciation of the severe hazards of smoking (thus taking up a role that the tobacco industry used to play), but it is also revealing that the agency actually doesn't care whether youth use real cigarettes or fake ones. They're just lumping them together: both products that kill hundreds of thousands of people, including about half of the youth who use them over many years, and products which have not been demonstrated to have any substantial health risks, and about which the worst the CDC can say is that "they are not harmless water vapor." Neither is coffee.
Apparently, to the CDC, if a youth uses an electronic cigarette, it is just as bad as that youth using a real tobacco cigarette. This shows a reckless disregard for the health of our nation's youth. Parents should be absolutely thrilled if their kids are using fake cigarettes instead of real ones. That smoking rates have declined in the presence of huge increases in e-cigarette use is a major public health victory. If all cigarette use among youth was replaced by e-cigarette experimentation, it would be a public health miracle that would save literally millions of future lives. But the CDC appears to have less interest in saving lives than it does in demonizing e-cigarettes simply because they are not just harmless water vapor.
To be clear, none of this means that we should not ban the sale of e-cigarettes to minors, discourage kids from using vaping products, regulate the marketing of e-cigarettes to youth, and educate kids about the potential health risks and the not clearly defined potential long-term risks associated with vaping. But we can do all of the above things without lying to kids. We can do all of these things without deceiving the public into thinking that electronic cigarettes contain tobacco when they do not.
In fact, by not being straightforward with our nation's youth by explaining the differences between cigarettes and e-cigarettes, the difference between the vast majority of vaping products that do not contain tobacco and the few which do (such as products like the Pax vaporizer), and the differences between vaping liquids and cartridges which contain nicotine and those which do not, the CDC is squandering an opportunity to actually make a difference by reducing the risks associated with vaping among youth and reducing the risk of addiction to these products.
For six years, the CDC has been scaring youth about the health effects of e-cigarette use, yet its campaign is not working: as the CDC itself documents, e-cigarette use continues to skyrocket. Clearly, this approach is not working. Telling the kids the truth would be the first step towards an effective strategy to confront the problem. Furthermore, such an approach would not have the adverse effect of undoing years of public education about the severe health hazards caused by smoking.
For those who think I am exaggerating when I opine that the public has less appreciation of the severe hazards of smoking than in the past, consider the scientific evidence: less than half of the public understands that smoking is more harmful than vaping, and the percentage of the public who think that smoking is no more harmful than vaping is increasing.
There are two things that the CDC has never told youth, and never told the American public either?
a. that electronic cigarettes do not contain tobacco; and
b. that electronic cigarettes are not as hazardous as tobacco cigarettes;
It is completely unnecessary, and quite damaging as well as dishonest and non-transparent, to hide this critical information from the public, and from youth. The CDC is treating youth like ignorant babies who have to have every decision made for them. Our nation's youth are actually more likely to take steps to protect themselves if they can make the decision for themselves by being fully informed about the facts. Sweeping, exaggerated, and deceptive propaganda has never worked as an approach to improving adolescent health.
Most importantly, honesty and transparency are important cornerstones in the ethical code of public health. By eschewing these principles for the sake of trying to use scare tactics, the CDC is not only violating this code, but it is risking losing the public's trust and undermining its own credibility. That would be a disaster. If people realize that the CDC is lying to them about the contents of electronic cigarettes, then the public may not trust the agency about other issues as well, and that could have disastrous outcomes.
Thursday, April 14, 2016
Former Associate Dean of Continuing Medical Education at Stanford Essentially Acknowledges Undisclosed Conflict of Interest in Recent Tobacco Control Paper
Yesterday, I discussed a paper published online ahead of print in the journal Tobacco Control
which blasts electronic cigarette companies and a consumer vaping advocacy
organization for creating "knock-off" advertisements that urge smokers
to quit by switching to vaping instead. The senior author of the paper -
Dr. Robert Jackler - is a professor in the Department of Otolaryngology
at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
One of my main criticisms was that in the paper, Dr. Jackler states that he has no conflicts of interest, but his curriculum vita reports having received grant funding from the Pfizer Corporation between 2010 and 2013. Assuming this is true, it represents a substantial conflict of interest because Pfizer markets a smoking cessation drug - varenicline - and therefore stands to lose potentially millions of dollars in profits if electronic cigarettes are successful and partially replace varenicline as a smoking cessation treatment approach.
In response to yesterday's blog post, Dr. Jackler argued (in the comments section of the blog) that I was categorically wrong, and that he had no conflict of interest based on the alleged association with Pfizer. He wrote the following:
"This is Robert Jackler of Stanford University writing to clear up Dr Siegal's assertion that I have a non-disclosed conflict of interest. This is categorically untrue. Between 2007 and 2011 I served as the Dean over Postgraduate Medical Education at the Stanford School of Medicine. The university received funding from Pfizer to support education programs. As the Dean overseeing these programs, i was listed on the grant. The funds were administered by the university and awarded by a faculty committee to individual course directors based upon their educational merit. The grant had nothing to do with scientific research, drug development, or anything of the sort. Stanford policy strictly prohibits commercial influence over its curriculum."
The Rest of the Story
My intention in writing about this issue is not to make this about any individual, but to shed light on the broad issue of failed conflict of interest disclosures which I am increasingly observing in the tobacco control research field. Obviously, in providing examples it is unavoidable to mention specific names of individuals. But my intent in responding here to Dr. Jackler's comments is to discuss the broader parameters of conflict of interest disclosure and to show how this concept is widely misunderstood, as evidenced by Dr. Jackler's argument.
The first criterion (of two) in judging whether a conflict of interest exists is whether or not there is a significant financial interest in a corporation. In his response, Dr. Jackler acknowledges having been the Dean overseeing education programs that were funded by Pfizer, and he acknowledges that he was listed on the grant. So in fact, the association with Pfizer was even stronger than I intimated yesterday, because Dr. Jackler was not merely a minor personnel on the grant; he apparently acknowledges that he was a Dean at the recipient institution and "overseeing" the programs funded by the grant. This, combined with the fact that Dr. Jackler lists the grant from the Pfizer Corporation on his CV, seems to dispel any doubt over whether there was a significant financial interest related to Pfizer, which is the first criterion in judging whether a conflict of interest exists. Pfizer itself has disclosed the grant, listing a payment of $1,000,000 to Stanford for the year 2011.
The second criterion in judging whether a conflict of interest exists is whether the research in question could be reasonably viewed as being related to the financial interest. In other words, does the company in question have a financial interest in the topic of the research? Here, it seems clear that Pfizer has a financial interest in an article attacking electronic cigarettes and discouraging their use for smoking cessation because Pfizer markets a smoking cessation drug (varenicline) and serves to lose financially (and substantially) if electronic cigarettes were to gain market share in the smoking cessation treatment category. In 2010, Pfizer's domestic revenues from the sale of varenicline were $252 million, and its global revenues from the sale of this drug were $755 million. Thus, there seems little doubt that the company has a substantial financial interest in research that attacks electronic cigarette companies and discourages the use of this alternative product for smoking cessation.
Based on the above two criteria, it seems clear to me that that a financial conflict of interest does exist with respect to the Tobacco Control paper and that it should have been disclosed.
Dr. Jackler's primary argument against this representing a conflict is that: "The grant had nothing to do with scientific research, drug development, or anything of the sort." However, the purpose of the funding is not relevant to the question of whether it represents a conflict. It is not only funding for scientific research or drug development that would represent a conflict. Any funding from the company in question is considered a significant financial interest. The relevant question, instead, is whether the funding company reasonably appears to be financially affected by the research article in question.
To illustrate this, suppose that I was a listed personnel on a $3 million grant from Philip Morris to support educational training of my public health students at Boston University. Would I not have to disclose that as a conflict of interest in a manuscript I publish which has potential financial implications for tobacco companies? Does the fact that the grant was for educational purposes, rather than for research, remove my duty to disclose the funding? I would argue that it certainly does not, and I have no doubt that my colleagues in tobacco control would have raked me over the coals if I had failed to disclose such a grant. The point is that receiving a grant from a corporation is considered a significant financial interest, even if the grant is not specifically for research or to study a specific product made by the company.
There are several other points worth mentioning. First, Dr. Jackler argues that "Stanford policy strictly prohibits commercial influence over its curriculum." Yet, the medical school accepted corporate funding to support its curriculum! This is about as hypocritical an assertion as I can imagine. If Stanford policy prohibits commercial influence over its curriculum, then certainly it should not allow the medical school to accept funding from a drug company to run a curricular program, and especially a program which covers the use of a drug made by that very company (according to an article in the Stanford Daily, the grant supported curricula related to smoking cessation).
There is no doubt that at least some saw the grant as violating university policy. The Stanford Daily wrote that the grant was indeed an "exception" to the policy: "Since 2008, Stanford has had a strict policy against commercial support for specific CME programming. However, this grant is an exception due to its open-ended scope."
The same article pointed out the blatant hypocrisy of the acceptance of this grant: "Stanford School of Medicine recently received a $3 million grant to eliminate corporate influence on continuing medical education (CME). The grant, however, came from an unexpected source: pharmaceutical giant Pfizer, Inc." Imagine: the way to eliminate corporate influence over continuing medical education is to fund that continuing medical education with money from a corporation! This is like arguing that the way we are going to eliminate the influence of Big Tobacco on university research is to accept money from Philip Morris! The logic of this evades me.
According to the same article, both the dean of the medical school and Dr. Jackler (then the dean of continuing medical education) acknowledged that one purpose of the grant was to improve Pfizer's image. This, in fact, is the primary purpose behind all corporate philanthropy, a fact that is widely acknowledged in the marketing literature. And we know from the example of Big Tobacco that it used precisely this type of approach to try to improve its corporate image.
Harvard Professor Emeritus Arnold Relman, a former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, sharply criticized Stanford for accepting this grant, stating: "it's just not a good idea for a profession that says it wants to be independent and trusted, a reliable source of information to the profession and the public about drugs, to take money from the drug company under any conditions," he told the New York Times.
And Dr. Adriane Fugh-Berman, a professor of medicine at Georgetown University and an expert on corporate influence on medical education, appropriately called accepting the grant "self-satirizing."
I do have to admit that it sounds like a great Onion headline: "Stanford Seeks to Reduce Corporate Influence over Continuing Medical Education by Accepting $3 Million from Drug Corporation to Develop Continuing Medical Education Programs."
One of my main criticisms was that in the paper, Dr. Jackler states that he has no conflicts of interest, but his curriculum vita reports having received grant funding from the Pfizer Corporation between 2010 and 2013. Assuming this is true, it represents a substantial conflict of interest because Pfizer markets a smoking cessation drug - varenicline - and therefore stands to lose potentially millions of dollars in profits if electronic cigarettes are successful and partially replace varenicline as a smoking cessation treatment approach.
In response to yesterday's blog post, Dr. Jackler argued (in the comments section of the blog) that I was categorically wrong, and that he had no conflict of interest based on the alleged association with Pfizer. He wrote the following:
"This is Robert Jackler of Stanford University writing to clear up Dr Siegal's assertion that I have a non-disclosed conflict of interest. This is categorically untrue. Between 2007 and 2011 I served as the Dean over Postgraduate Medical Education at the Stanford School of Medicine. The university received funding from Pfizer to support education programs. As the Dean overseeing these programs, i was listed on the grant. The funds were administered by the university and awarded by a faculty committee to individual course directors based upon their educational merit. The grant had nothing to do with scientific research, drug development, or anything of the sort. Stanford policy strictly prohibits commercial influence over its curriculum."
The Rest of the Story
My intention in writing about this issue is not to make this about any individual, but to shed light on the broad issue of failed conflict of interest disclosures which I am increasingly observing in the tobacco control research field. Obviously, in providing examples it is unavoidable to mention specific names of individuals. But my intent in responding here to Dr. Jackler's comments is to discuss the broader parameters of conflict of interest disclosure and to show how this concept is widely misunderstood, as evidenced by Dr. Jackler's argument.
The first criterion (of two) in judging whether a conflict of interest exists is whether or not there is a significant financial interest in a corporation. In his response, Dr. Jackler acknowledges having been the Dean overseeing education programs that were funded by Pfizer, and he acknowledges that he was listed on the grant. So in fact, the association with Pfizer was even stronger than I intimated yesterday, because Dr. Jackler was not merely a minor personnel on the grant; he apparently acknowledges that he was a Dean at the recipient institution and "overseeing" the programs funded by the grant. This, combined with the fact that Dr. Jackler lists the grant from the Pfizer Corporation on his CV, seems to dispel any doubt over whether there was a significant financial interest related to Pfizer, which is the first criterion in judging whether a conflict of interest exists. Pfizer itself has disclosed the grant, listing a payment of $1,000,000 to Stanford for the year 2011.
The second criterion in judging whether a conflict of interest exists is whether the research in question could be reasonably viewed as being related to the financial interest. In other words, does the company in question have a financial interest in the topic of the research? Here, it seems clear that Pfizer has a financial interest in an article attacking electronic cigarettes and discouraging their use for smoking cessation because Pfizer markets a smoking cessation drug (varenicline) and serves to lose financially (and substantially) if electronic cigarettes were to gain market share in the smoking cessation treatment category. In 2010, Pfizer's domestic revenues from the sale of varenicline were $252 million, and its global revenues from the sale of this drug were $755 million. Thus, there seems little doubt that the company has a substantial financial interest in research that attacks electronic cigarette companies and discourages the use of this alternative product for smoking cessation.
Based on the above two criteria, it seems clear to me that that a financial conflict of interest does exist with respect to the Tobacco Control paper and that it should have been disclosed.
Dr. Jackler's primary argument against this representing a conflict is that: "The grant had nothing to do with scientific research, drug development, or anything of the sort." However, the purpose of the funding is not relevant to the question of whether it represents a conflict. It is not only funding for scientific research or drug development that would represent a conflict. Any funding from the company in question is considered a significant financial interest. The relevant question, instead, is whether the funding company reasonably appears to be financially affected by the research article in question.
To illustrate this, suppose that I was a listed personnel on a $3 million grant from Philip Morris to support educational training of my public health students at Boston University. Would I not have to disclose that as a conflict of interest in a manuscript I publish which has potential financial implications for tobacco companies? Does the fact that the grant was for educational purposes, rather than for research, remove my duty to disclose the funding? I would argue that it certainly does not, and I have no doubt that my colleagues in tobacco control would have raked me over the coals if I had failed to disclose such a grant. The point is that receiving a grant from a corporation is considered a significant financial interest, even if the grant is not specifically for research or to study a specific product made by the company.
There are several other points worth mentioning. First, Dr. Jackler argues that "Stanford policy strictly prohibits commercial influence over its curriculum." Yet, the medical school accepted corporate funding to support its curriculum! This is about as hypocritical an assertion as I can imagine. If Stanford policy prohibits commercial influence over its curriculum, then certainly it should not allow the medical school to accept funding from a drug company to run a curricular program, and especially a program which covers the use of a drug made by that very company (according to an article in the Stanford Daily, the grant supported curricula related to smoking cessation).
There is no doubt that at least some saw the grant as violating university policy. The Stanford Daily wrote that the grant was indeed an "exception" to the policy: "Since 2008, Stanford has had a strict policy against commercial support for specific CME programming. However, this grant is an exception due to its open-ended scope."
The same article pointed out the blatant hypocrisy of the acceptance of this grant: "Stanford School of Medicine recently received a $3 million grant to eliminate corporate influence on continuing medical education (CME). The grant, however, came from an unexpected source: pharmaceutical giant Pfizer, Inc." Imagine: the way to eliminate corporate influence over continuing medical education is to fund that continuing medical education with money from a corporation! This is like arguing that the way we are going to eliminate the influence of Big Tobacco on university research is to accept money from Philip Morris! The logic of this evades me.
According to the same article, both the dean of the medical school and Dr. Jackler (then the dean of continuing medical education) acknowledged that one purpose of the grant was to improve Pfizer's image. This, in fact, is the primary purpose behind all corporate philanthropy, a fact that is widely acknowledged in the marketing literature. And we know from the example of Big Tobacco that it used precisely this type of approach to try to improve its corporate image.
Harvard Professor Emeritus Arnold Relman, a former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, sharply criticized Stanford for accepting this grant, stating: "it's just not a good idea for a profession that says it wants to be independent and trusted, a reliable source of information to the profession and the public about drugs, to take money from the drug company under any conditions," he told the New York Times.
And Dr. Adriane Fugh-Berman, a professor of medicine at Georgetown University and an expert on corporate influence on medical education, appropriately called accepting the grant "self-satirizing."
I do have to admit that it sounds like a great Onion headline: "Stanford Seeks to Reduce Corporate Influence over Continuing Medical Education by Accepting $3 Million from Drug Corporation to Develop Continuing Medical Education Programs."
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
Vaping Opponent Attacks E-Cigarette Companies for Urging Smokers to Quit; Hides Conflict of Interest
A paper published online ahead of print in the journal Tobacco Control blasts electronic cigarette companies and a consumer vaping advocacy organization for creating "knock-off" advertisements that urge smokers to quit by switching to vaping instead. The senior author of the paper - Dr. Robert Jackler - is a professor in the Department of Otolaryngology at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
There are two sets of advertisements in question. Both are parodies of anti-smoking ads by government health agencies.
The first is a parody of the Australian government's "Stop Smoking Start Repairing" campaign. These are advertisements that highlight the benefits of quitting smoking. In the parody ads, entitled "Stop Smoking Start Vaping," the same benefits of quitting smoking are depicted. The tag line remains the same: "Every cigarette you don't smoke is doing you good." These ads are aimed at educating smokers about the health benefits of switching to electronic cigarettes and they urge smokers to quit smoking by using electronic cigarettes.
The second campaign is a parody of the CDC's "Tips from Former Smokers" campaign. The CDC campaign features former smokers giving advice to current smokers to quit smoking. In one ad, the spokesperson is a woman who had tried unsuccessfully to quit smoking using an electronic cigarette and then suffered a pneumothorax ("collapse" of the lung). The ad attributes this unfortunate consequence to the fact that she tried vaping.
In the parody ads, the consumer vaping advocacy group NOTBlowingSmoke (which itself is a parody of the California state health department's "Still Blowing Smoke" anti-vaping campaign), responds to the deception in the "Still Blowing Smoke" ads by pointing out that rather than having devastating health effects, quitting smoking by switching to e-cigarettes is associated with the immense health benefits associated with quitting smoking. After all, it is quitting smoking. The ads feature tips from smokers who have quit using e-cigarettes, emphasizing how much their health has improved after having quit smoking.
Dr. Jackler and colleagues attack the ads on two grounds. First, they argue that these ads are deceptive and not evidence-based. Second, they argue that the ads represent copyright infringement. Specifically, they write:
"Unlike government-issued antismoking advertisement parodies, which are based on scientific evidence, the knock off advertisements by the e-cigarette industry are misleading and deceptive. They also make no attempt at humour or parody. These copycat advertisements hijack the intended purpose of antitobacco material for use in either pro e-cigarette propaganda or promotion of a specific e-cigarette brand. Their adaptation of antismoking advertisements can not only create confusion among the public, but is an illegal infringement of their creators’ copyright privilege."
The Rest of the Story
The authors are wrong on both counts.
First, these advertisements are not deceptive or misleading. Instead, they tell the truth. It is an undeniable fact that quitting smoking will greatly improve your health. The fact that you quit using e-cigarettes as opposed to some other form of treatment does not negate those benefits. There is scientific documentation of substantial health benefits - both in terms of cardiovascular and respiratory health - associated with quitting smoking with the use of e-cigarettes.
Moreover, in the case of the CDC ad parodies, the campaign is actually correcting misinformation being disseminated by the CDC and the California Department of Health Services. The CDC ads imply that the attempt to switch to vaping was the cause of the pneumothorax experienced by the smoker. This is misleading because it wasn't the vaping that caused the problem; it was the smoking. Had the smoker actually switched to vaping, it is highly unlikely that she would have experienced the lung collapse. It was her failure to switch to vaping that resulted in an adverse health consequence. Since the CDC is apparently urging smokers not to quit using e-cigarettes, we can expect many more adverse health consequences to occur as a result of this campaign, as thousands of smokers who might otherwise have quit by switching to vaping will no longer do so.
In the case of the California Department of Health Services, the NOTBlowingSmoke ads are helping to correct numerous statements made by the government. Some are not just deceptive, but are outright lies. Today, the California Department of Health Services claims that vaping causes "popcorn lung," which is not true. Smoking itself has not been associated with "popcorn lung," and the levels of diacetyl in electronic cigarette vapor is on average 750 times lower than in cigarette smoke. And nowhere does the Department warn smokers about the dangers of "popcorn lung." This is incredibly misleading and inappropriate.
Second, the Department claims that vaping causes asthma, infection, and heart disease. There is no evidence to support any of these claims. In fact, the overwhelming evidence demonstrates that switching to vaping actually improves asthma symptoms and lung function in asthmatic smokers.
Third, the Department claims that vaping is as dangerous, or even more dangerous than smoking. This is an outright lie. And in this way, the campaign is not only fraudulent, but also shameful and destructive.
Fourth, the Department claims that Big Tobacco has informed the public that vaping is "harmless." This is false and probably defamatory.
The second argument made by the authors of the paper is also incorrect. These ad campaigns do not represent copyright infringement because they are protected by "fair use." They are clearly parodies of the original ads, and they transform them by correcting their misinformation and showing how the same claim being made against e-cigarettes actually supports the use of e-cigarettes. Moreover, these ads serve an important public health cause by correcting misinformation that is being disseminated by the government. And furthermore, because the ads being parodied were produced by government agencies, not private companies, the "fair use" doctrine applies. There is no copyright for CDC materials, which are essentially in the public domain because the CDC is a federal agency.
There are, however, two aspects of deception going on. But in contrast to what the authors argue - that the deception is coming from the e-cigarette advocates - the truth is that the deception is coming from the authors of this paper.
First, the authors imply that NOTBlowingSmoke is essentially an electronic cigarette industry front group. The truth is that the organization was formed by vaping consumer advocates, not by any e-cigarette company.
Second, Dr. Jackler states in the article that he has no conflicts of interest in writing it: "Competing interests: None declared." But the truth is that Dr. Jackler has what I consider to be a significant conflict of interest; namely, that he has received grant support from Pfizer, a company that markets a smoking cessation drug and stands to lose a huge amount of profits if smokers use e-cigarettes to quit rather than varenicline.
There are two sets of advertisements in question. Both are parodies of anti-smoking ads by government health agencies.
The first is a parody of the Australian government's "Stop Smoking Start Repairing" campaign. These are advertisements that highlight the benefits of quitting smoking. In the parody ads, entitled "Stop Smoking Start Vaping," the same benefits of quitting smoking are depicted. The tag line remains the same: "Every cigarette you don't smoke is doing you good." These ads are aimed at educating smokers about the health benefits of switching to electronic cigarettes and they urge smokers to quit smoking by using electronic cigarettes.
The second campaign is a parody of the CDC's "Tips from Former Smokers" campaign. The CDC campaign features former smokers giving advice to current smokers to quit smoking. In one ad, the spokesperson is a woman who had tried unsuccessfully to quit smoking using an electronic cigarette and then suffered a pneumothorax ("collapse" of the lung). The ad attributes this unfortunate consequence to the fact that she tried vaping.
In the parody ads, the consumer vaping advocacy group NOTBlowingSmoke (which itself is a parody of the California state health department's "Still Blowing Smoke" anti-vaping campaign), responds to the deception in the "Still Blowing Smoke" ads by pointing out that rather than having devastating health effects, quitting smoking by switching to e-cigarettes is associated with the immense health benefits associated with quitting smoking. After all, it is quitting smoking. The ads feature tips from smokers who have quit using e-cigarettes, emphasizing how much their health has improved after having quit smoking.
Dr. Jackler and colleagues attack the ads on two grounds. First, they argue that these ads are deceptive and not evidence-based. Second, they argue that the ads represent copyright infringement. Specifically, they write:
"Unlike government-issued antismoking advertisement parodies, which are based on scientific evidence, the knock off advertisements by the e-cigarette industry are misleading and deceptive. They also make no attempt at humour or parody. These copycat advertisements hijack the intended purpose of antitobacco material for use in either pro e-cigarette propaganda or promotion of a specific e-cigarette brand. Their adaptation of antismoking advertisements can not only create confusion among the public, but is an illegal infringement of their creators’ copyright privilege."
The Rest of the Story
The authors are wrong on both counts.
First, these advertisements are not deceptive or misleading. Instead, they tell the truth. It is an undeniable fact that quitting smoking will greatly improve your health. The fact that you quit using e-cigarettes as opposed to some other form of treatment does not negate those benefits. There is scientific documentation of substantial health benefits - both in terms of cardiovascular and respiratory health - associated with quitting smoking with the use of e-cigarettes.
Moreover, in the case of the CDC ad parodies, the campaign is actually correcting misinformation being disseminated by the CDC and the California Department of Health Services. The CDC ads imply that the attempt to switch to vaping was the cause of the pneumothorax experienced by the smoker. This is misleading because it wasn't the vaping that caused the problem; it was the smoking. Had the smoker actually switched to vaping, it is highly unlikely that she would have experienced the lung collapse. It was her failure to switch to vaping that resulted in an adverse health consequence. Since the CDC is apparently urging smokers not to quit using e-cigarettes, we can expect many more adverse health consequences to occur as a result of this campaign, as thousands of smokers who might otherwise have quit by switching to vaping will no longer do so.
In the case of the California Department of Health Services, the NOTBlowingSmoke ads are helping to correct numerous statements made by the government. Some are not just deceptive, but are outright lies. Today, the California Department of Health Services claims that vaping causes "popcorn lung," which is not true. Smoking itself has not been associated with "popcorn lung," and the levels of diacetyl in electronic cigarette vapor is on average 750 times lower than in cigarette smoke. And nowhere does the Department warn smokers about the dangers of "popcorn lung." This is incredibly misleading and inappropriate.
Second, the Department claims that vaping causes asthma, infection, and heart disease. There is no evidence to support any of these claims. In fact, the overwhelming evidence demonstrates that switching to vaping actually improves asthma symptoms and lung function in asthmatic smokers.
Third, the Department claims that vaping is as dangerous, or even more dangerous than smoking. This is an outright lie. And in this way, the campaign is not only fraudulent, but also shameful and destructive.
Fourth, the Department claims that Big Tobacco has informed the public that vaping is "harmless." This is false and probably defamatory.
The second argument made by the authors of the paper is also incorrect. These ad campaigns do not represent copyright infringement because they are protected by "fair use." They are clearly parodies of the original ads, and they transform them by correcting their misinformation and showing how the same claim being made against e-cigarettes actually supports the use of e-cigarettes. Moreover, these ads serve an important public health cause by correcting misinformation that is being disseminated by the government. And furthermore, because the ads being parodied were produced by government agencies, not private companies, the "fair use" doctrine applies. There is no copyright for CDC materials, which are essentially in the public domain because the CDC is a federal agency.
There are, however, two aspects of deception going on. But in contrast to what the authors argue - that the deception is coming from the e-cigarette advocates - the truth is that the deception is coming from the authors of this paper.
First, the authors imply that NOTBlowingSmoke is essentially an electronic cigarette industry front group. The truth is that the organization was formed by vaping consumer advocates, not by any e-cigarette company.
Second, Dr. Jackler states in the article that he has no conflicts of interest in writing it: "Competing interests: None declared." But the truth is that Dr. Jackler has what I consider to be a significant conflict of interest; namely, that he has received grant support from Pfizer, a company that markets a smoking cessation drug and stands to lose a huge amount of profits if smokers use e-cigarettes to quit rather than varenicline.
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Vaping Opponent's Bias Revealed in Wall Street Journal Op-Ed
In an op-ed piece published in the Wall Street Journal, Dr. Pamela Ling - a professor of medicine with the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at the University of California, San Francisco - argues that electronic cigarettes hinder, rather than aid smoking cessation and that smokers should use more effective methods such as nicotine patches.
The basis of her conclusion is as follows: "There is only one randomized clinical trial—the type of study considered most reliable—comparing e-cigarettes with a nicotine patch. It showed low quit rates and virtually no difference: 7% of nicotine e-cigarette users and 6% of nicotine patch users quit."
The Rest of the Story
Dr. Ling has acknowledged that the most reliable evidence on the effectiveness of e-cigarettes comes from a randomized clinical trial. I completely agree. Surveys of the effectiveness of e-cigarettes are plagued by selection bias, as are observational studies of differences in quit rates between e-cigarette users and non-users.
So far we're on the same page. We both agree: we need to look at the randomized controlled trial results to make a judgment on the potential effectiveness of electronic cigarettes. We also agree that there is only one randomized controlled trial that has been conducted. And third, we both agree on the results: the trial showed virtually no difference in the effectiveness of e-cigarettes compared to nicotine patch users.
OK ... so from this clinical trial, we agree that the most reliable evidence to date shows that e-cigarettes are comparable to the nicotine patch in efficacy for smoking cessation.
But from that evidence, Dr. Ling draws an inexplicable, illogical, and unsupported conclusion: E-cigarettes are not effective for smoking cessation and smokers should use NRT rather than e-cigarettes.
But based on the clinical trial, if e-cigarettes are ineffective for smoking cessation, then so is the nicotine patch. As Dr. Ling acknowledged, there was "virtually no difference" in the effectiveness of the two products. Another way of stating this is to say that there was no evidence that the nicotine patch was any more effective than electronic cigarettes. Or, you could state it as follows: electronic cigarettes are just as effective as the nicotine patch for smoking cessation.
No matter how you slice it, the evidence that Dr. Ling presents to support her conclusion that e-cigarettes are not effective actually shows that e-cigarettes are just as effective as the nicotine patch. The quit rates were virtually identical with the two products under randomized conditions. Nevertheless, she concludes from this evidence that e-cigarettes are not effective, while the nicotine patch is effective.
The only explanation I can think of for this faulty reasoning is strong investigator bias. To draw such a conclusion from that evidence suggests that a researcher has reached a pre-determined conclusion and that the existing bias is shaping the conclusions.
Perhaps it is not surprising, then, that this same researcher was involved in what I consider to be dishonest research reporting on the effectiveness of e-cigarettes for smoking cessation.
This is the second example in two days which demonstrates that tobacco control researchers are so biased against e-cigarettes that they have thrown away the rules of causal inference in order to demonize these products, which in truth are being used by hundreds of thousands of people in an attempt to save their lives by quitting smoking.
The basis of her conclusion is as follows: "There is only one randomized clinical trial—the type of study considered most reliable—comparing e-cigarettes with a nicotine patch. It showed low quit rates and virtually no difference: 7% of nicotine e-cigarette users and 6% of nicotine patch users quit."
The Rest of the Story
Dr. Ling has acknowledged that the most reliable evidence on the effectiveness of e-cigarettes comes from a randomized clinical trial. I completely agree. Surveys of the effectiveness of e-cigarettes are plagued by selection bias, as are observational studies of differences in quit rates between e-cigarette users and non-users.
So far we're on the same page. We both agree: we need to look at the randomized controlled trial results to make a judgment on the potential effectiveness of electronic cigarettes. We also agree that there is only one randomized controlled trial that has been conducted. And third, we both agree on the results: the trial showed virtually no difference in the effectiveness of e-cigarettes compared to nicotine patch users.
OK ... so from this clinical trial, we agree that the most reliable evidence to date shows that e-cigarettes are comparable to the nicotine patch in efficacy for smoking cessation.
But from that evidence, Dr. Ling draws an inexplicable, illogical, and unsupported conclusion: E-cigarettes are not effective for smoking cessation and smokers should use NRT rather than e-cigarettes.
But based on the clinical trial, if e-cigarettes are ineffective for smoking cessation, then so is the nicotine patch. As Dr. Ling acknowledged, there was "virtually no difference" in the effectiveness of the two products. Another way of stating this is to say that there was no evidence that the nicotine patch was any more effective than electronic cigarettes. Or, you could state it as follows: electronic cigarettes are just as effective as the nicotine patch for smoking cessation.
No matter how you slice it, the evidence that Dr. Ling presents to support her conclusion that e-cigarettes are not effective actually shows that e-cigarettes are just as effective as the nicotine patch. The quit rates were virtually identical with the two products under randomized conditions. Nevertheless, she concludes from this evidence that e-cigarettes are not effective, while the nicotine patch is effective.
The only explanation I can think of for this faulty reasoning is strong investigator bias. To draw such a conclusion from that evidence suggests that a researcher has reached a pre-determined conclusion and that the existing bias is shaping the conclusions.
Perhaps it is not surprising, then, that this same researcher was involved in what I consider to be dishonest research reporting on the effectiveness of e-cigarettes for smoking cessation.
This is the second example in two days which demonstrates that tobacco control researchers are so biased against e-cigarettes that they have thrown away the rules of causal inference in order to demonize these products, which in truth are being used by hundreds of thousands of people in an attempt to save their lives by quitting smoking.
Monday, April 11, 2016
Vaping Opponents Can Miraculously Read People's Minds
A group of researchers who are attacking electronic cigarette use have apparently been able to determine that smokers are not using these devices to attempt to quit smoking. How were they able to come to this determination? ...
... Apparently, by reading people's minds!
As reported by the Belfast News Letter, a recent study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine concludes that e-cigarettes don't help people quit smoking. How was this determination made? It was made by studying the search terms that people are using when they use terms related to e-cigarettes or vaping while doing Google searches. And supposedly, the finding that people are increasingly using search terms related to "vaping" or "buying" e-cigarettes rather than using search terms related to "smoking cessation" or "e-cigarette health effects" indicates that e-cigarette users have no interest in quitting smoking.
As explained in a press release, the study "shows a significant jump in the popularity of the words “vape” and “vaping,” and a decline in searches related to vaping health and smoking cessation ... “The e-cigarette industry, the media, and the vaping community have promoted the notion that e-cigarettes are an effective device for quitting smoking, yet what we’re seeing is that there are very few people searching for information about that,” said the study’s senior author ... “They are more commonly searching for terms like ‘buy,’ shop,’ or ‘sale.’”"
The author further explained: "Individuals in the U.S. often endorse ENDS as smoking-cessation aids, and some surveys suggest that many believe using ENDS will help them quit combustible cigarettes. However, only a small and declining percentage of Google searchers for ENDS included terms indicative of cessation. The context of this discrepancy is critical. When primed by survey questions, individuals appear to link ENDS with cessation, but in the privacy of their own home (when no investigator is providing options), it appears that searches for ENDS and cessation are infrequent."
The Rest of the Story
The conclusion that people who are using the internet to purchase e-cigarettes must not be interested in smoking cessation is ridiculous. Suppose that a smoker was very interested in using an e-cigarette to quit smoking and decides to purchase an e-cigarette. Naturally, the person might very well conduct a search for "buy e-cigarettes." How does doing such a search in any way indicate that the person has no interest in quitting smoking?
All you can infer from such a search is that the person most likely is interested in buying e-cigarettes. You cannot tell what the person's reason is for wanting to buy those e-cigarettes.
So how were these researchers able to figure out what the people were thinking? Apparently, by reading people's minds. According to one of the researchers: "Examining the content of searches can reveal the searcher’s thoughts...".
So that's how they did it!
Apparently, even though all they knew was that a person was interested in buying e-cigarettes, these researchers could miraculously read that person's mind and figure out the reason the person was interested in vaping.
Obviously, this is ridiculous. You can't tell from simply those search terms what was in the person's mind. You don't know whether the person is a smoker or a non-smoker. You don't know why they are interested in vaping. And you wouldn't necessarily need to type in "smoking cessation" if you wanted to use e-cigarettes to quit smoking. Moreover, there's a simple explanation for why people are increasingly using the terms "vape" and "vaping." It's because that's increasingly how e-cigarettes are being referred to, especially as second and third generation products replace cig-a-likes.
So why would these researchers jump to such a ridiculous conclusion? The only explanation apparent to me is that the researchers had a pre-existing bias against e-cigarettes and that they wanted to find evidence that these products are not being used for smoking cessation.
The rest of the story is that tobacco control researchers are so biased against e-cigarettes that they have thrown away the rules of causal inference in order to demonize these products, which in truth are being used by hundreds of thousands of people in an attempt to save their lives by quitting smoking. And we don't have to read minds to draw this latter conclusion. Thousands of people have actually told us that they are using e-cigarettes to try to quit.
... Apparently, by reading people's minds!
As reported by the Belfast News Letter, a recent study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine concludes that e-cigarettes don't help people quit smoking. How was this determination made? It was made by studying the search terms that people are using when they use terms related to e-cigarettes or vaping while doing Google searches. And supposedly, the finding that people are increasingly using search terms related to "vaping" or "buying" e-cigarettes rather than using search terms related to "smoking cessation" or "e-cigarette health effects" indicates that e-cigarette users have no interest in quitting smoking.
As explained in a press release, the study "shows a significant jump in the popularity of the words “vape” and “vaping,” and a decline in searches related to vaping health and smoking cessation ... “The e-cigarette industry, the media, and the vaping community have promoted the notion that e-cigarettes are an effective device for quitting smoking, yet what we’re seeing is that there are very few people searching for information about that,” said the study’s senior author ... “They are more commonly searching for terms like ‘buy,’ shop,’ or ‘sale.’”"
The author further explained: "Individuals in the U.S. often endorse ENDS as smoking-cessation aids, and some surveys suggest that many believe using ENDS will help them quit combustible cigarettes. However, only a small and declining percentage of Google searchers for ENDS included terms indicative of cessation. The context of this discrepancy is critical. When primed by survey questions, individuals appear to link ENDS with cessation, but in the privacy of their own home (when no investigator is providing options), it appears that searches for ENDS and cessation are infrequent."
The Rest of the Story
The conclusion that people who are using the internet to purchase e-cigarettes must not be interested in smoking cessation is ridiculous. Suppose that a smoker was very interested in using an e-cigarette to quit smoking and decides to purchase an e-cigarette. Naturally, the person might very well conduct a search for "buy e-cigarettes." How does doing such a search in any way indicate that the person has no interest in quitting smoking?
All you can infer from such a search is that the person most likely is interested in buying e-cigarettes. You cannot tell what the person's reason is for wanting to buy those e-cigarettes.
So how were these researchers able to figure out what the people were thinking? Apparently, by reading people's minds. According to one of the researchers: "Examining the content of searches can reveal the searcher’s thoughts...".
So that's how they did it!
Apparently, even though all they knew was that a person was interested in buying e-cigarettes, these researchers could miraculously read that person's mind and figure out the reason the person was interested in vaping.
Obviously, this is ridiculous. You can't tell from simply those search terms what was in the person's mind. You don't know whether the person is a smoker or a non-smoker. You don't know why they are interested in vaping. And you wouldn't necessarily need to type in "smoking cessation" if you wanted to use e-cigarettes to quit smoking. Moreover, there's a simple explanation for why people are increasingly using the terms "vape" and "vaping." It's because that's increasingly how e-cigarettes are being referred to, especially as second and third generation products replace cig-a-likes.
So why would these researchers jump to such a ridiculous conclusion? The only explanation apparent to me is that the researchers had a pre-existing bias against e-cigarettes and that they wanted to find evidence that these products are not being used for smoking cessation.
The rest of the story is that tobacco control researchers are so biased against e-cigarettes that they have thrown away the rules of causal inference in order to demonize these products, which in truth are being used by hundreds of thousands of people in an attempt to save their lives by quitting smoking. And we don't have to read minds to draw this latter conclusion. Thousands of people have actually told us that they are using e-cigarettes to try to quit.
Monday, April 04, 2016
American Cancer Society Supports E-Cigarette Tax to Keep Youth Smokers from Quitting
According to an article in the Rutland Herald, the local chapter of the American Cancer Society is concerned that kids might switch away from smoking and start using electronic cigarettes instead. To prevent that occurrence, they are lobbying for a huge 92% tax on electronic cigarettes so that there is no longer a price advantage for these products over real tobacco cigarettes. Without the price advantage, youth smokers will be deterred from making the switch, so they will - as the ACS apparently wishes - continue smoking their tobacco cigarettes.
This may sound completely absurd, and it is. But unfortunately, it appears to be true. The American
Cancer Society was quoted in the piece as stating the following:
"This tax is an important step in getting e-cigarettes out of the hands of Vermont youth. We know kids are extremely price sensitive, so keeping the price high enough will help slow down the skyrocketing use of the unregulated, addictive products by Vermont kids. This tax at 92 percent of wholesale would create parity with cigarettes and other tobacco products, which will help eliminate the switching to e-cigarettes."
The Rest of the Story
The rest of the story is that the American Cancer Society is here revealing that they actually prefer that kids continue to smoke rather than that they switch to tobacco-free cigarettes. When it comes to the use of cigarettes by kids, the ACS has made it known that it prefers that you use tobacco-full cigarettes rather than tobacco-free cigarettes.
That's quite unfortunate, especially since this is an organization that is supposed to be reducing cancer, not increasing it.
Furthermore, the effect of the tax on adults will be even worse. By taking any financial incentive out of switching to vaping, this law will help protect cigarette profits and keep smoking rates high by deterring smoking cessation using vaping products.
I think it is the time of reckoning in the tobacco control movement. Are we really going to switch sides and promote smoking because we are so threatened by a tobacco-free product that is saving lives, but that we didn't think of and which looks like smoking? Anti-smoking groups may believe they are on the same side as before because they are fighting against nicotine use. The truth is, however, that they have switched from the public health side (a desire to save lives and protect the public's health) to an ideological side whose actions are in line with the best interests of maintaining high cigarette profits.
Today’s story reveals how absurd the campaign against e-cigarettes has become. Vaping opponents have completely lost sight of public health’s mission, so much so that they are now actually fighting to preserve and protect smoking.
This may sound completely absurd, and it is. But unfortunately, it appears to be true. The American
Cancer Society was quoted in the piece as stating the following:
"This tax is an important step in getting e-cigarettes out of the hands of Vermont youth. We know kids are extremely price sensitive, so keeping the price high enough will help slow down the skyrocketing use of the unregulated, addictive products by Vermont kids. This tax at 92 percent of wholesale would create parity with cigarettes and other tobacco products, which will help eliminate the switching to e-cigarettes."
The Rest of the Story
The rest of the story is that the American Cancer Society is here revealing that they actually prefer that kids continue to smoke rather than that they switch to tobacco-free cigarettes. When it comes to the use of cigarettes by kids, the ACS has made it known that it prefers that you use tobacco-full cigarettes rather than tobacco-free cigarettes.
That's quite unfortunate, especially since this is an organization that is supposed to be reducing cancer, not increasing it.
Furthermore, the effect of the tax on adults will be even worse. By taking any financial incentive out of switching to vaping, this law will help protect cigarette profits and keep smoking rates high by deterring smoking cessation using vaping products.
I think it is the time of reckoning in the tobacco control movement. Are we really going to switch sides and promote smoking because we are so threatened by a tobacco-free product that is saving lives, but that we didn't think of and which looks like smoking? Anti-smoking groups may believe they are on the same side as before because they are fighting against nicotine use. The truth is, however, that they have switched from the public health side (a desire to save lives and protect the public's health) to an ideological side whose actions are in line with the best interests of maintaining high cigarette profits.
Today’s story reveals how absurd the campaign against e-cigarettes has become. Vaping opponents have completely lost sight of public health’s mission, so much so that they are now actually fighting to preserve and protect smoking.