Many people in a recent study said they’d tried to find out what
chemicals are in tobacco products or smoke, but most were not familiar
with components other than nicotine.
Surveyed by phone, more than half the respondents
said they’d like to see this information on cigarette packs and a
quarter would like to have access to it online.
Of the 7,000 constituents of cigarette smoke, 93 in
particular are quite toxic, said Dr. Kurt M. Ribisl of the Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill.
“It’s pretty surprising how relatively few people
have heard of these yet many were interested in hearing more about
them,” Ribisl told Reuters Health by phone.
The most simple and effective messaging may be to
list the chemicals and, briefly, their health effects, he said. For
example, cigarette smoke contains arsenic, which causes heart damage,
and formaldehyde, which causes throat cancer.
Ribisl and colleagues surveyed nearly 5,000 U.S.
adults by phone, targeting high smoking/ low income areas and cell phone
numbers.
Almost a quarter of respondents reported being smokers, most saying they had smoked every day for the past month.
The researchers chose 24 harmful chemicals in tobacco
and divided them into six groups of four. Each participant answered
questions about one group of four chemicals, selected at random.
More
than a quarter of respondents said they had looked for information on
the constituents of tobacco smoke, most commonly young adults and
smokers. More than half said they would most prefer to see this
information on cigarette packs.
Only eight percent of respondents knew that at least
three of the four chemicals they were asked about are present in
cigarette smoke, the researchers reported in BMC Public Health.
“Many people seek information on smoke components but
not many find it,” said Dr. Reinskje Talhout of the National Institute
for Public Health and the Environment at the Center for Health
Protection in The Netherlands.
“Here they also seek it but in general don’t
understand it very well, so we developed fact sheets for the general
public,” Talhout told Reuters Health by phone.
Having this information may help smokers make an
informed decision, but there is no evidence yet on how it may change
smoking behavior, Talhout said.
“If people hear about these components they are quite shocked,” she said.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has a list of harmful and potentially harmful tobacco components available to consumers, and tobacco manufacturers are obliged to send this list and amounts in their products to the FDA, Talhout said.
It’s still not clear how providing this information
on packs might change behavior, Ribisl noted, and it is possible that
listing amounts of chemicals will simply lead consumers to “comparison
shop” and choose a brand with marginally lower amounts of the same
dangerous chemicals, rather than quitting altogether.
“Both the Centers for Disease Control and FDA are very credible sources about this information,” he said.
“One of the things I would like the FDA and others to
think about is what they can put on the side of the cigarette pack,
what kind of message can we put there to help create informed smokers,”
he said.


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