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Statement of Charles O. Whitley on behalf of the Tobacco Institute before the Subcommittee on Health and the Environment - Committee on Energy and Commerce - U.S. House of Representatives
Abstract
Presents draft testimony opposing: (1) H.R. 4793 requiring a new Surgeon General's warning to appear in advertising and on cigarette packages and (2) H.R. 3294 authorizing Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to regulate cigarettes. Addresses implications of 20th Surgeon General's Report entitled "The Health Consequences of Smoking: Nicotine Addiction", quoting contrary evidence from research studies, legal precedents, and cessation surveys (see Bates 32095).
Fields
- Named Organization
- Action on Smoking and Health
- ASH (Action on Smoking and Health)
Action on Smoking and Health- Boston Globe
- Congress
- Consumer Product Safety Commission
- FDA
- Food and Drug Administration
- French Minister of Health
- Health and Human Services
- HHS
- House of Representatives
- Indianapolis Star
- Kansas City Star
- Orange County (CA) Register
- R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
- Surgeon General
- U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
- University of California at San Francisco
- World Health Organization (Concerned with global public health)
International organization concered with public health worldwide- World Health Organization
- ASH (Action on Smoking and Health)
- Named Person
- Blau, T.H. PhD
- Hirsch, A. Prof.
- Raffle, S.M. MD
- Slattery, Rep.
- Whittaker, Rep.
- Hirsch, A. Prof.
- Type
- Draft material
- Position statement
- Presentation materials
- Position statement
- Keyword
- 20th Report of the Surgeon General
- Action on Smoking and Health v. Harris, 655 F.2d 236 (D.C. Cir. 1980)
- Cipollone Case
- Comprehensive Smoking Education Act of 1984
- Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act
- FTC v. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co., 108 F. Supp. 573 (S.D.N.Y. 1952), affd, 203 F.2d 955 (2d Cir. 1953).
- H.R. 2376
- H.R. 3294
- H.R. 4793
- Low nicotine cigarettes
- Low tar cigarettes
- National Health Interview Survey
- The Health Consequences of Smoking: Nicotine Addiction
- United States v. 354 Bulk Cartons *** Trim Reducing Aid Cigarettes, 178 F. Supp. 847 (D.N.J. 1959)
- United States v. 46 Cartons, More or Less, Containing Fairfax Cigarettes, 113 F. Supp. 336 (D.N.J. 1953)
- Action on Smoking and Health v. Harris, 655 F.2d 236 (D.C. Cir. 1980)
- Subject
- Additives
- advertising
- Cessation
- Federal level
- Government agencies
- Human subjects
- industry response
- legislation
- Legislatures
- nicotine
- Smoke
- Warning labels
- addiction
- advertising
Document Images
Statement of Charles O. Whitley
on behalf of
The Tobacco Institute
to the
Subcommittee on Health and the Environment
Committee on Ene~gy and Commerce
United States House of Representatives
July 29, 1988
Mr. Chairman, .~istinguished members of the Subcom-
mittee and former collea.~ues. I appreciate the opportunity to
appear before you today on behalf of The Tobacco Institute to
discuss the 20th Report of the Surgeon General, "The Health
Consequences of Smoking: Nicotine Addiction," and the nature
and extent of the Food a~d Drug Administration's authority to
regulate cigarettes.
With me today nee Theodore H. Blau, Ph.D., a practi-
cing clinical psychologi!~t, and Stephen M. Raffle, M.D.,
Assistant Clinical Profe~sor of Psychiatry at the University
of California at San Francisco. Dr. Blau and Professor Raffle
will address the Surgeon General's assertions with respect to
cigarettes and addiction from a clinical and scientific stand-
point.
Although this hearing has been called as an oversight
hearing, both of the matters to be considered are subjects of
pending legislation. Rep. Slattery has introduced a bill
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PRIV[L~ ~D AND CONF~DEN~IAL
lh'o~uced as required by the Court's March
$~te of Minnesota, et ~.
_ Court FUe No.: C1-9~8565
(H.R. 4793) to require a new Surgeon General'~ warning to
appear on cigarette pack.ages and in cigarette advertising,
stating that "nicotine ii~ cigarettes is an addictive drug."
Repo Whittaker has introduced a bill (H.R. 3294} that would
authorize the Food and Drug Administration "to Eegulate ciga-
rettes in a manner similar to its regulation of food and
drugs."
Mr. Chairman, The Tobacco Institute opposes both
bills. To call cigarett.e smoking an "addiction" trivializes
the serious drug problem faced by our society and undermines
efforts to combat drug abuse. This is the Surgeon General
who, in all seriousness, publicly proclaimed in 1982 that
youn9 people are "addicted'* to video games. The escalation of
antismoklng rhetoric by the Surgeon General in his latest
Report is similarly withDut medical or scientific foundation
-- as a number of public health officials have recognized, and
as the 41 million Americans who have stopped smoking attest.
Neither is there any justification for establishin~
a special regime of regulatlon of cigarettes by the Food and
Drug Administration. The FDA has not treated cigarettes as
"exempt" from regulation under the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act but has asserted jurisdiction when health claims
have been made by vendors or manufacturers. Subjecting ciga-
rettes to speclal FDA regulation in the absence of health
claims would impose substantial new burdens on the agency,
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State oi IVimn~"'.'.., -
Court File No.: C1.94-8565
fragment its regulatory focus and divert scarce resources from
such essential tasks as approval of new medicines.
When the Surgeon General released his 20th Report
this May, comparing tobacco with "other addicting drugs such
as heroin and cocaine," the critical response from public
health figures and others was instantaneous. Professor Albert
Hirsch, author of the foreword and conclusion to an extensive
1987 report on tobacco to the French Minister of Health and a
vocal critic of the tobacco industry, condemned the Surgeon
General's conclusions in a May 18 interview on French radio:
"Tobacco cannot be compared to drugs, espe-
cially hard dru~s like heroin or other
narcotics. It ~s always bad to fight an evil
with misstatements or distortions of the
truth. * * * Talk of 'addiction' would mean
comparing tobacco to something which com-
pletely alters the personality of the sub-
jects, turning them into anti-social indi-
viduals, which we know is not the case with
the overwhelming majority of smokers. We
should resist the kind of discrimination and
witch-hunt that can be observed in some of
the excesses of the antitobacco campaign in
the United States."
In voicing this criticism of the Surgeon General's
claims, Professor Hirsch echoed, earlier findings of the World
Health Organization. As the Surgeon General himself acknow-
ledges, WHO long ago drogped the term "addiction" from its
lexicon, concluding that the term is so misunderstood and
misused that it lacks any useful meaning. 20th Report, p. 248.
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Se~ WHO Expect Committe~ on Addiction-Producing Dcugs, Thir-
teenth Re~rt (1964).
Editorial writers across the country also immedi-
ately registered sharp disagreement with the Surgeon General's
addl~tion report. The Hoston Globe noted that "[s]moking
bears no resemblance to drug abuse or alcohol abuse. Smoking
does not affect mental acuity, nor temporarily derange a per-
son, nor produce so much as a lull in anyone's contact with
"Classifying the dangers of nicotine with the
horrors of heroin or cocaine is misguided
zealotry. It downgrades, even discredits,
the nation's campaign against hard drugs.
* * * [TJhe Surgeon General's latest attack
on smoking is ~tself generally irresponsible
.i,..nthusiasm has turned to zealotry and is
on ~ts way to .~anaticism. His concern for
the people's health is no longer mixed with a
healthy respect: for individual rights and
individual responsibility."
The.Kansas ~_
City Star called the Surgeon General's
contentions w~th respect ~o cigarette smokfn, and addiction
"r~d£culous~" and the Orange County ~CA~ Register commented:
"What we need is a differen~ warning, to be stamped on every
federa~ document and on every paycheck given to governmen~
workers, reading: 'WARNING~ Power is addictive. Once you
start abusing your office and wasting the taxpayers' money,
you,my not be able to stop.'"
Dr. Blau and Professor Raffle will comment in detail
on the medical and scientific aspects of the Surgeon General's
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Report. I would note, however, that the Report is merely a
compilation of existing literature. No new research is oon-
rained in the Report. Indeed, significant portions of the
data in the Report actually cqntradict the Surgeon General's
conclusion that cigarette smoking is "addictive." The Report
~cites, for example, a 1985 National Health Interview Surve
stopped smoking. According to the. survey, approximately 90
percent oZ these former smokers quit smoking without formal
treatment programs or smoking cessation devices.
If the difficulty of stopping use of heroln or
cocaine is the measure of an "addiction" -- a step usually
requiring hospitalization and outpatient treatment and the
wholesale restructuring of the former addict's lifestyle_ --
then the comparison of nicotine to such hard drugs is clearly
absurd. If the effect of heroin or cocaine use on the user is
the measure of an "addictive" substance -- impairing the indi-
vidual's ability to think clearly and otherwise to lead a
normal everyday life --~hen, by this standard as well, nico-
tine cannot be considered "addictive."
On the other hand, if the mere fact tha~ some people
find it difflcult to quit smoking is enough to make smoking an
"addiction," then any habitual behavior may be considered an
"addiction." People who have trouble controlling their eating
may be considered "addicted" to food, and some people may be
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considered "addicted" to television. Similarly, if the mere
cigarette smoking produces some pharmacological
fact
that
effects is enough to make smoking an "addiction," then coffee
drinking is also "addictive." Once the term "addiction" is so
political document. Its conclusions conform with the Surgeon
General's political goal of a smokeless society, and
undoubtedly were reached long before the Report was drafted.
By branding cigarette smoking an "addiction"--a term with-
deepl~ pejorative moral and social connotations -- the Surgeon
General obviously hopes to strengthen the antismoking cause
generally and, undoubtedly, hopes to make it easier for plain-
tiffs to prevail in tobacco product liability cases. The
"addiction" claim, of co~rse, was not accepted by the jury in
the Cipo~one case in New Jersey, even after the Surgeon
General's Report was introduced into evidence by the plaintiff.
In sum, there is no medical or scientific basis for
viewing cigarette smoking as an "addiction," and no justifica-
tion for legislation requiring any new warning label of the
sort that Rep. Slattery has proposed. The effort to disparage
cigarette smoking as an "addiction" can only detract from our
soolety's attempt to meet its serious drug problem.
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II.
The other purpose of this hearing is to "review the
nature and extent of the Food and Drug Administration's
authority to regulate nicotine Containing products such as the
~o-¢alled 'smokeless cigarette.'" We understand that the
~ eEerence to the "sm k le i " " "
~'~._~r o e ss c'garette is a reference to a
~cernlng that product. The Tobacco Institute is not in a posi-
tlon to discuss particular products of individual member compa-
nies.
The Tobacco Institute, as stated earlier, opposes
any proposal to establis~ a special regime for regulating
cigarettes under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. The
proposal of Rep. Whittaker (H.R. 3294) in this regard -- like
the proposal of Rep. Bates (H.R. 2376} to confer upon the Con-.
sumer Product Safety Co~,ission authority to regulate ciga-
rettes -- appears to rest on the premise that tobacco and
tobacco products are essentially "unregulated." Rep. Whittaker
has flatly stated that tise FDA is "powerless" to regulate
cigarettes. These suggestions are unwarranted.
The claim that cigarettes are somehow unregulated
(or underregulated) Ignores, among other things, the many
statutes and regulatlons that govern virtually every aspect of
the growing, manufacture, marketing and use of tobacco and
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tobacco products -- including cigarettes. In my testimony at
the September 16, 1987, hearing on H.R. 2376 before the Subcom-
mittee on Commerce, Consumer Protection and Competitiveness of
the House Energy and Commerce Committee, I discussed in detail
the extensive regulation of tobacco and tobacco products at
every level of government -- federal, state and local.
o£fe= my prepared statement at that hearing for your considera-
tlon. As you will see, tobacco and tobacco products already
are among the most intensively regulated products in America.
Any suggestion that the FDA ~iews cigarettes as
"exempt" from. regulation under the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act ~s particularly mistaken. The FDA in fa~t has
asserted jurisdiction over cigarettes when health claims were
made by the vendors or manufacturers, and the COUrtS have
sustained the Agency's assertion of jurisdiction. (See
United States v. 46 Cartq~@., More or Less, Containing Fairfax
Cigarettes, 113 F. Supp. 336 (D.N.J. 1953); ~nited States v.
354 Bul~ Cartons * * * Trim. ~educin@ Ai~ Cigarettes, 178
Supp. 847 (D.N.J. 1959);. see also FTC v. Liggett & Myers
ToSacco Co., 108 F. Supp. 573 (S.D.N.¥. 1952), all'd, 203 F.2d
955 (2d Cir. 1953).} Absent such health claims, the FDA has
concluded that cigarettes are not a "drug" within the meaning
oE the Act, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit has upheld the FDA's position. (Action on
Smo~In~ and Health v. Harris, 655 F.2d 236 (D.C. Cir. 1980}.)
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Antismoking advocates recently have petitioned the
FDA to institute proceedings to regulate low-"tar," low-
nicotine cigarettes as "drugs" under the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act, contending that such cigarettes are promoted
as a means of reducing ~he alleged health ris~s associated
.
with smoking. The FDA denied a similar petition in 1980. The
most recent petition has no more merit.
In the Comprehensive Smoking Education Act o~ 1984
to "conduct and support research on the effect of cigarette
smok~n~ on human health and develop materials ~or informing
the public of such effect." 15 U.S.C ~ 1341(a)(I) Congress
•
.
also directed the Secretary to "coordinate all research and
educational programs and other activities within the Department
• * * which relate to the effect of cigarette smoking on human
health." I__d. S 1341(a)(2). In addition, cigarette manufac-
turers are required by the Comprehensive Smoking Education Act
to disclose annually to the Secretary all ingredients added to
the tobacco used in cigarettes. The Secretary, in turn, is
required by the 1984 Act to report to Congress on any such
ingredient that, in his j~dgment, "poses a health risk to
cigarette smokers." I__d. S. 1335a(a), (b)(1)(B). There is no
evidence that the Secretary is unable to discharge these
responsibilities, and no basis ~or transferring those responsi-
bilities to the FDA, as H.R. 3294 effectively would do.
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Mr. Chairman, the FDA is a beleaguered agency, with
scarcely enough resourcE~s to perform such essential functions
as approving new medfcir~es. The historic policy of focusing
FDA regulation on foods, drugs, cosmetics and medical devices
is a sound one, and sho~id not be f~agmented by expanding the
agency's jurisdiction ad hoc to encompass products that do not
fall within those categories. Congress should not establish
special systems of FDA ~egulation for products that are not
foods, drugs, cosmetics or medical devices.
I would be ple.ased to answer any questions.
I~KIVILEGED AND cONFIDENTIAL
Produced as required by the CouPs March 7,1998 Ord~
State o[ Minnesota, et al. v. Philip Morris, et ak
Court File No.: C1-94-8565
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