#Tobacco industry claims plain packs wont work based on weak evidencetobacco companies lack strong relevant evidence to support their claims that standardized (plain) packaging of tobacco products in the UK won't work finds research published in the online journal BMJ Open. The aim of plain packaging with no logos brand imagery symbols or promotional text is to restrict the already limited opportunities that transnational tobacco companies have to market their products and deter people from starting smoking. Australia adopted plain packaging for tobacco products in 2012 the same year that the Department of health in England held a public consultation on similar plans. The Department then said it wanted to wait for more evidence of the likely impact on tobacco consumption before adopting the policy. It has since commissioned an independent review of evidence relating to unbranded and standardized packaging which is due to report this spring. The researchers analyzed evidence cited in submissions made to the Department of health's consultation on plain packaging by the UK's four largest transnational tobacco companies: Imperial Tobacco; Japan Tobacco International; Philip morris Ltd; and British american tobacco. The four companies submitted lengthy consultation responses--1521 pages in total of which 328 comprised their main responses and 1193 provided supplementary material. In these submissions the companies rejected the conclusions of a systematic review commissioned by the Department of health that there was strong evidence that plain packaging would reduce the appeal of tobacco products and increase the prominence of health warnings. Instead they argued that there is no evidence that plain packaging would reduce smoking prevalence or deter people from starting to smoke. The researchers looked at the volume relevance (subject matter) and quality (as measured by independence from industry and peer review) of the evidence cited by the companies and compared it with the evidence from the systematic review. Seventy seven out of 143 pieces of evidence were used to promote the companies'claim that plain packs won't work. Of these only 17 (22%)addressed standardized packaging 14 of which were linked to industry. None was published in peer reviewed journals--a key hallmark of quality. Compared with the evidence in the systematic review relevant evidence cited by the tobacco industry was of significantly lower quality. Across all 77 documents evidence linked to industry was significantly less likely to have been published in a peer reviewed journal than the independent evidence cited by them. With few exceptions evidence cited by transnational companies to promote their claim that standardized packaging'won't work'lacks either policy relevance or key indicators of quality conclude the authors. Story Source: The above story is provided based on materials by BMJ-British Medical Journal. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. Journal Reference e
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