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New Cigarette Warnings Released (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

The Huffington Post   Catherine Pearson   First Posted: 06/21/11 08:40 AM ET   Updated: 08/20/11 06:12 AM ET

The Food and Drug Administration released nine new graphic warnings for cigarette packages today -- the first new labels in more than two decades. The new warnings, which depict the negative health impact of cigarettes, are required to cover at least 50 percent of every pack of cigarettes sold in the U.S. by mid-2013.

Scroll down for photos of the new warnings

"The introduction of these warnings is expected to have a significant public health impact by decreasing the number of smokers, resulting in lives saved, increased life expectancy and lower medical costs," the FDA's web site states.

The new labels replace the smaller, text-only warnings that have appeared on packages for more than 25 years and feature jarring images, including a man with a tracheotomy hole and a mouth filled with rotting teeth. They are a result of The Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, passed in 2009. It gave the government authority to regulate the marketing and labeling of tobacco products, which are currently responsible for nearly 450,000 deaths in the U.S. every year.

Last fall, the FDA released 36 potential warnings, which featured images like a mother blowing smoke in her baby's face and a a grey, damaged lung. The labels were made available to public comment and were the subject of some concern among experts who questioned whether they went far enough.

Joanna Cohen, PhD, director of the Institute for Global Tobacco Control at Johns Hopkins University explains that the key to effective warning labels is their ability to spark emotion, be it empathy or fear.

"What we've seen in terms of best practices globally is that you want pictures and accompanying text that elicit an emotion from the viewer," she said. "It makes people react."

She also said that the size of warning labels is important.

"Bigger is better, just because people notice [the labels] more," Cohen explained.

She thinks that the FDA's requirement of 50 percent of a pack is "respectable," though it doesn't necessarily "push the boundaries in terms of what's happening globally." (Earlier this month, Australia proposed plain packaging on all cigarette packs, meaning they would be stripped of all logos, colors and branding and just contain the product name alongside a large health warning.)

Research has shown that warning labels are effective in getting smokers to consider quitting.

A recent Centers for Disease Control study found in 13 out of 14 countries that ratified a World Health Organization treaty requiring warning labels on cigarette packs, a quarter of smokers who noticed them indicated they were considering quitting. And in six of those countries, more than half of the smokers who saw them said they were considering quitting because of the warning labels.

But intent to quit is different than actually quitting, Cohen cautioned, adding that warning labels are only part of a very serious and costly picture. Tobacco is the leading cause of preventable death in the U.S. and, according to CDC estimates, costs the economy some $200 billion per year in medical costs and lost productivity.

"Graphic images are probably not as important as raising the price [of cigarettes] or eliminating them from the work place," concurred Dr. Richard Hurt of the Mayo Clinic's Nicotine Dependence Center. "But it's a good first step."

Quick Poll

What do you think of the new cigarette labels?

They should have been even more graphic.

Too much! Please remove these and let people smoke in peace.

They're great (in a disgusting way) just as they are. Good work FDA.


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The Food and Drug Administration released nine new graphic warnings for cigarette packages today -- the first new labels in more than two decades. The new warnings, which depict the negative health im...
The Food and Drug Administration released nine new graphic warnings for cigarette packages today -- the first new labels in more than two decades. The new warnings, which depict the negative health im...
 
 
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05:15 PM on 08/17/2011
I hate people who quit smoking that are now so against it. I used to smoke and quit, but I never once have told anyone they need to quit. I encourage them if they make the choice. It's flat out wrong to require these images.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Devra Davis, Ph.D.
12:47 AM on 07/11/2011
Next we need warning labels on cellphones
03:15 PM on 07/09/2011
I am a graphic designer and I am based in Gujarat state of India. I have been a regular smoker however not a addict as I have observed that for days and months and sometimes consistently for almost a year I did not smoke. My father who was a chain smoker earlier but after surviving major heart attack he quit smoking. Well even though I am aware of what my Dad has undergone, I use to smoke. My Dad stopped instantly, that only inspires me and makes me proud. I adhere to his method of kicking off the habit. I just release the thoughts to smoke and well I stop, sometimes an odd event calls for smoke well it is picked up. Two or three maximum, all that one needs to identify the various other pleasure life has to offer to compenste the urge to smoke. I dont think graphics normally do make people really understand the vagaries of smoking habit, let us graphically set their minds as there are lot of things to do on this earth....all one has to explore and take a puff of satisfaction only when he explores and feels satisfied.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cailleach Echo
06:53 PM on 07/09/2011
This post is exactly why these graphics won't work. Those who want to smoke will find ways to rationalize it. Its just human nature.

A documentary on Current TV's Vanguard program shows cigarette companies hawking their poison to third world countries. Their ads are aimed at children who start as young as two or three years old. Its very sad to see pre-teen boys acting all cool and saying they're "cowboys" puffing away on their Marlboros.

I doubt these images would change those kid's perceptions either.

I smoked for many years and I'm very glad to be free of the stench and the expense. And, i love having y breath back.
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TRhett
Everyone should get what they deserve
01:31 PM on 07/09/2011
A waste of time and energy . . . I'm certainly not against efforts to reduce smoking, but nobody who smokes pays any attention to this type of thing (nor do kids - maybe if their parents tried a little harder . . . ) In Europe, the warnings are so large they almost cover the entire cigarette pack, and they still smoke like fiends - EVERYWHERE. I'm surprised that these people have forgotten the age-old rule that if you have too many signs, people ignore them all.
10:20 PM on 07/08/2011
the images are great. If I saw these pictures as a child on cigarettes..i'll prolly wouldn't start smoking...WAIT!?

What I'm talking about. I started smoking when the military said I was going to Iraq
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DrDooit
Damn! It feels good to be a liberal!
10:24 AM on 07/08/2011
I am shocked and appalled that the government would endorse such violent images to be on display for children to see. I suppose they are no more violent than the dead bodies on CSI or SVU or other mainstream cop dramas on network television. But we better sound the alarms and hise our children in the basement if a boob pops out during the Super Bowl.

Will we see images of fat, dead people on McDonalds containers or crashed cars and ripped apart bodies on a bottle of wine in the near future?
05:11 AM on 07/08/2011
To require the tobacco companies to do this is outright fascist. If the government wishes to go this route I believe that graphic pictures of diseased livers, fatal car accidents, the after affects of a domestic assault, etc, should be displayed on every can of beer and bottle of liquor. While we're at it, why don't we put graphic photos of children hit by cars on every car sold in America. Perhaps we can also plaster pictures of lacerations and disembowelment on every weapon sold as well. Let's not just target cigarettes. Letting the government get away with even this one small victory is leading us down the road to a fascist dictatorship.
03:34 AM on 07/08/2011
I have to wonder what if anything is going through the minds of those folk who still smoke. I wish they would stop - everyone. The government should have the right to draconianly tax people who make lots of money in industries like this.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DrDooit
Damn! It feels good to be a liberal!
10:24 AM on 07/08/2011
You do not believe in a free country and the persuit of happiness. Communist!
11:11 PM on 07/07/2011
If you want cheap tobacco, grow your own. Buy the seeds or plants, and harvest your own crop. Roll your own cigarettes, and save a bunch of money. No more six dollars a pack.
09:43 PM on 07/07/2011
WAIT , why should we do something the government tells to do ????
dose'nt seem to work the way its supposed too.
09:23 PM on 07/07/2011
Gold cases will be back in soon
01:07 AM on 07/07/2011
The new warnings are horrible, hopefully horrible enough to make people stop smoking or never start. I thank God for giving me the strength to quit cold turkey years ago. It was so hard, all I thought of was cigarettes. I lit up when I got up, when I had coffee, by ten a.m., I would've had probably six or seven, by bedtime twenty or more, and if I got up to go to the bathroom at night, hey might as well have one then, too. After I quit, I signed up for a smoking cessation clinic, not sure if it was the Cancer Society or what group. They were a huge help. When I stopped thinking of them every moment, it gradually got easier to do without one. Now, I would never light up again.My hair and clothes smell good, and my husband doesn't have to kiss an ashtray anymore.
09:44 PM on 07/07/2011
I really think you should have stopped at friday the 13th part 3,
but loved your Moms movies
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StrawHat
Eat veggies, don't vote for them
12:07 AM on 07/07/2011
No one should have to work in an enclosed space with cigarette or other tobacco smoke.

Make it so.
04:46 PM on 07/06/2011
Here's a thought, Government - stop all this reckless spending and ruining the economy and the dollar, stop making life nothing but stress-mode for millions of Americans, so that way they'll have more of what they earn and not be stressed out to need a cigarette! Brilliant idea, right? Oh, I forgot, that doesn't give you billions of quick cash revenue to pocket in your 'private' accounts and endeavors - you might actually have to wait for an actual recovery to grow.
06:01 AM on 07/06/2011
just because the put bad pictures of cig doen't mean that people will quit..some of us try to quit but we get stress with life and we are back to puffing on those nasty things..don't look down on us give us a helping hand..it's an additicion like drugs
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StrawHat
Eat veggies, don't vote for them
12:08 AM on 07/07/2011
It's a terrible addiction, I agree. I quit after years of multi-pack smoking. I believe you can quit, too, but I won't honey-coat it for you: it will be very hard. However, you can do it.