30 May 2016 11:48 pm
This year’s theme of ‘No Tobacco Day’ which is ‘plain packaging’ envisages several objectives according to the WHO: reducing the attractiveness of tobacco products, eliminating the effects of tobacco packaging as a form of advertising and promotion, addressing package design techniques that may suggest that some products are less harmful than others and increasing the noticeability and effectiveness of health warnings.
The challenges which remain before us in moving towards plain packaging are several; the concept itself is something new to both policy makers and the public. “Only those in the no-tobacco business are familiar with the concept and its implications, therefore we need to spread this message around and get people to understand the likely advantages,” asserts the Chairman, National Authority on Tobacco and Alcohol (NATA), Dr. Palitha Abeykoon. He maintains that Public Health Warnings (PHWs) with the plain packaging (without the brand and the attractive presentation of the boxes) will further reduce the appeal of the package which is one of the reasons for the lesser appeal it has for youth.
The second challenge in championing this concept is the litigation the tobacco industry will initiate. “The industry will take the government and NATA to court, as they have done in a number of other countries and of course these tobacco companies have lost in all cases. Australia, UK and many South American countries are fine examples. All these countries are implementing plain packaging. Therefore the process can be delayed and cause distractions which need to be overcome,” maintains Dr. Abeykoon.
Fighting to implement plain packaging in Sri Lanka implies a battle with the world tobacco industry, not just the local tobacco industry, their agents and advocates, points out the Executive Director, Alcohol and Drug Information Centre (ADIC), Pubudu Sumanasekara. “Although the Minister of Health issued the gazette notification on August 8, 2012, notifying the enforcement of pictorial warnings to protect children, youth, women, non-smokers and even smokers in our country, it took three and a half years to finally establish PHWs in Sri Lanka. So based on the history and the unscrupulous nature of the tobacco industry, there will be bigger challenges from multinationals.” However, we are in a better position compared to other countries, observes Mr. Sumanasekara who attributes it to some proactive individuals found at policy making level. “However, we still have the challenge of convincing policy makers and politicians in relevant authorities.”
Among tobacco demand reduction approaches, raising taxes on tobacco is the most effective policy
Here at home, cigarette prices have not increased compared to essential goods according to affordability and inflation over many years, observes the ADIC Executive Director who cites a study conducted by Verité Research. This study reveals that the price of a John Player Gold Leaf cigarette, which has the largest market share (over 83%)maintains the same level of affordability as it had been from 1980 to 2000. Had the prices been adjusted since 2000 in keeping with GDP per capita, the price of a stick as of 2014, should have been Rs. 47 although it was priced at Rs. 28.
“Considering the local taxation context, it can be observed that there is no consistency of tax rates between the various lengths of cigarettes. Moreover, the total tax share on retail price has been less than the recommended minimum of 75%. The loss due to the combined effect of under-pricing and under taxation is estimated to exceed 20 billion in 2013 which was twice as much as what was spent on Samurdhi benefits,” points out the ADIC Executive Director. According to ADIC studies, even users prefer price increases as that supports quitting. “Recently phone tax rates increased by 15% and the government is expecting Rs. 12,815 billion.
This money could have been easily collected without burdening the majority of the population if alcohol and tobacco taxes were increased by 1.2%,” observes Sumanasekara.
World research shows that 30% of the legal tobacco industry’s profit is fuelled by illegally smuggled ‘legal cigarettes’. “So cigarette smuggle is part of the so called legal tobacco industry. From time to
As the NATA Chairman explains, we have just concluded a conference on illicit tobacco and have signed the Illicit Tobacco Protocol of the Framework Convention. We are in fact the first in South East Asia to do so. “Now we are in a position to share more information on illicit tobacco and smuggling of cigarettes. The problem is that sometimes it is the tobacco industry itself that does the smuggling to derive benefits from the government, to keep the prices low.
This often happens a few months before the budget session.”
It is imperative for the civil society including the media to be more proactive on the issue of tobacco and smoking. This public health problem has a heavy toll on the national economy as well as the state health sector, not forgetting the fact that the burden of tobacco-related illnesses and deaths is
Shedding light upon the psychological impact of less attractive packaging and pictorial health warnings, Consultant Psychiatrist, National Hospital of Sri Lanka and Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Medicine, University of Colombo, Dr. Mahesh Rajasuriya explains that the principle of ‘Conditioning’ found in Psychology is employed by the advertising agencies. “What conditioning means, when you associate one stimulus with a pleasant stimulus, you start feeling pleasant about the first stimulus. In terms of the tobacco industry and its advertising, it is depicted that smokers have more female attraction. Theoretically, the same principle can be used to make a person feel unpleasant about a certain stimulus as well. Less attractive packing and pictorial health warnings could give a negative message which would make a smoker feel unpleasant about buying cigarettes.”
Empirically, however, as the Consultant explains, we do not have local research findings. Yet countries such as Australia have notable research findings to confirm that smokers find cigarettes less appealing with such moves, he says. “Some smokers have even reported a decline in taste and the good news is that imitating smoking has also dropped notably.”
What makes it difficult for a smoker to quit is tri-pronged: physical, psychological and social. Nicotine contained in cigarettes is addictive and as Dr. Rajasuriya explains, tobacco companies over the years have ‘mastered the habit of delivering nicotine’. Psychologically, smokers associate certain lifestyle behaviours such as using the toilet or reading a newspaper with smoking. Socially, it is the image one builds up as a smoker, the fact that there is an expectation from others to smoke. “the tobacco industry plays a huge role in all these three domains. Very often tobacco companies sponsor quitting help lines and websites which paint the picture that quitting is a daunting task, which is not so,” says the psychiatrist, who also notes that the tobacco industry advertises not only through formal means but also through informal channels, placing the product in unsuspecting locations such as in movies.
Interestingly many smokers quit without professional help. “Other than a minority, many quit with the influence and support of their immediate network such as friends and families. Although there is medication to help mitigate withdrawal symptoms such as anxiety, irritability, lack of concentration, these symptoms last only for a couple of days,” explains the psychiatrist.