Literature DB >> 17297072

Death at a discount: how the tobacco industry thwarted tobacco control policies in US military commissaries.

Elizabeth A Smith1, Viginia S Blackman, Ruth E Malone.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The US military is perhaps the only retailer consistently losing money on tobacco. Military stores (commissaries and exchanges) have long sold discount-priced cigarettes, while the Department of Defense (DoD) pays directly for tobacco-related healthcare costs of many current and former customers. Tobacco use also impairs short-term troop readiness.
OBJECTIVE: To examine the long struggle to raise commissary tobacco prices and the tobacco industry's role in this policy effort.
METHODS: Analysis of internal tobacco industry documents, searches of government and military websites and newspaper databases, and interviews with key informants identified in the documents.
RESULTS: Efforts to raise commissary tobacco prices began in the mid-1980s. Opposition quickly emerged. Some military officials viewed tobacco use as a "right" and low prices as a "benefit". Others raised issues of authority, and some saw the change as threatening the stores. The tobacco industry successfully exploited complex relationships among the Congress, the DoD, commissaries, exchanges and private industry, obstructing change for over a decade. Leadership from the Secretary and Assistant Secretaries of Defense, presidential support and procedural manoeuvring finally resulted in a modest price increase in 1996, but even then, high-level military officials were apparently threatened with retaliation from pro-tobacco Congressmen.
CONCLUSIONS: The longstanding military tradition of cheap cigarettes persists because of the politics of the military sales system, the perception within the military of tobacco use as a right, and tobacco industry pressures. Against its own best interests, the US military still makes tobacco available to service members at prices below those in the civilian sector.

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Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17297072      PMCID: PMC2598443          DOI: 10.1136/tc.2006.017350

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tob Control        ISSN: 0964-4563            Impact factor:   7.552


  9 in total

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2.  Tobacco industry documents: treasure trove or quagmire?

Authors:  R E Malone; E D Balbach
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3.  Smoking, exercise, and physical fitness.

Authors:  T L Conway; T A Cronan
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6.  Adult tobacco use levels after intensive tobacco control measures: New York City, 2002-2003.

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7.  The cigarette manufacturers' efforts to promote tobacco to the U.S. military.

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Journal:  Mil Med       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 1.437

8.  Economic consequences of tobacco use for the Department of Defense, 1995.

Authors:  A J Helyer; W T Brehm; L Perino
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9.  The effects of alcohol and tobacco use on troop readiness.

Authors:  V Zadoo; S Fengler; M Catterson
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  9 in total
  33 in total

1.  A national survey of cigarette prices at military retail outlets.

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3.  Availability, price and promotions for cigarettes and non-cigarette tobacco products: an observational comparison of US Air Force bases with nearby tobacco retailers, 2016.

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5.  Testing antismoking messages for Air Force trainees.

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6.  Military and veteran health behavior research and practice: challenges and opportunities.

Authors:  Jeffrey P Haibach; Michael Ann Haibach; Katherine S Hall; Robin M Masheb; Melissa A Little; Robyn L Shepardson; Anne C Dobmeyer; Jennifer S Funderburk; Christopher L Hunter; Margaret Dundon; Leslie R M Hausmann; Stephen K Trynosky; David E Goodrich; Amy M Kilbourne; Sara J Knight; Gerald W Talcott; Michael G Goldstein
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7.  Mediatory myths in the U.S. military: tobacco use as "stress relief".

Authors:  Elizabeth A Smith; Ruth E Malone
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8.  Forcing the Navy to sell cigarettes on ships: how the tobacco industry and politicians torpedoed Navy tobacco control.

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9.  "Everywhere the soldier will be": wartime tobacco promotion in the US military.

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10.  A qualitative analysis of the tobacco control climate in the U.S. military.

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