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One
Stop, New You, Right Now.
Companies
have made cigarettes more addictive: study
San
Francisco – The amount of nicotine in cigarettes rose by about
11 per cent from 1998 through 2005, potentially making cigarette
smoking more addictive, according to a study by researchers at the
Harvard School of public Heath.
The researchers confirmed the magnitude of increase in their analysis
of data provided by cigarette makers and reported by the Massachusetts
Department of Public Health in August. The state requires tobacco
companies to disclose nicotine yields each year.
The Harvard study found that while levels of nicotine, the primary
addictive ingredient in cigarettes, fluctuated from year to year
they increased on averag4e by 1.6 per cent per year over the period
studied. The researchers also said nicotine levels rose in cigarettes
from all four major manufacturers and across all major market categories,
such as menthol, full-flavour, light and ultra lights.
“If Cigarette makers don’t want adults to be addicted,
and they don’t want kids to start, it’s not a good thing
to increase the amount of nicotine,” said Gregory Connolly,
lead author of the study and a professor of public health at Harvard.
“They are actually enhancing the ability of the smoker to
extract more nicotine.”
Connolly said Thursday he was surprised to find that cigarettes
appeared to be designed to deliver more nicotine, both because of
increased concentration of the substance in the tobacco leaves,
and by modifying the design of cigarettes to increase the number
of puffs taken by smokers.
“Hopefully, the study will be a wake-up call to persuade Republicans
and Democrats alike to enact long-overdue legislation allowing the
FDA to regulate cigarettes,” Senator Edward Kennedy (Dem.-Massachusetts)
said in a statement yesterday. He called the Harvard study an “extraordinary
public service.”
Philip Morris USA, the Richmond, Virginia based tobacco unit of
Altria Group Inc., said in a statement Thursday that data it provided
to Massachusetts public health officials how nicotine levels for
its Marlboro brand were 1.86 milligrams per cigarette in 1997, the
same as in 2006. The 2006 figures weren’t included in the
Harvard study.
A spokesman for R.J/ Reynolds Tobacco, a unit of Reynolds American
Inc., said the company is reviewing the research and declined to
comment.
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