| Literature DB >> 24667150 |
Selda Ulucanlar1, Gary J Fooks1, Jenny L Hatchard1, Anna B Gilmore1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Standardised packaging (SP) of tobacco products is an innovative tobacco control measure opposed by transnational tobacco companies (TTCs) whose responses to the UK government's public consultation on SP argued that evidence was inadequate to support implementing the measure. The government's initial decision, announced 11 months after the consultation closed, was to wait for 'more evidence', but four months later a second 'independent review' was launched. In view of the centrality of evidence to debates over SP and TTCs' history of denying harms and manufacturing uncertainty about scientific evidence, we analysed their submissions to examine how they used evidence to oppose SP. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24667150 PMCID: PMC3965396 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Number of pages analysed from all BAT and JTI submission documents.
| Document type | Subject matter | Author, date | Number of pages | Number of pages analysed |
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| Consultation response |
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| Smoking attitudes and behaviours |
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| Review of impact assessment | Gibson, 2012 | 30 | 0 | |
| All BAT documents | 122 | 19 | ||
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| Consultation response |
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| Smoking attitudes and behaviours |
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| Keegan, 2008 | 90 | 0 | ||
| Keegan, 2009 | 35 | 0 | ||
| Devinney, 2010 | 125 | 0 | ||
| Smoking decision-making | Steinberg, 2010 | 98 | 0 | |
| Dhar & Nowliss, 2010 | 60 | 0 | ||
| Economic impacts | Lilico, 2008 | 89 | 0 | |
| Lilico, 2010 | 87 | 0 | ||
| Procedural: Better Regulation | Cave, 2010 | 61 | 0 | |
| Trade agreements | Gervais, 2010 | 36 | 0 | |
| Illicit trade | Chaudhry & Zimmerman, 2012 | 180 | 0 | |
| All JTI documents | 1142 | 86 | ||
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| 1264 | 105 | ||
Documents with pages analysed are indicated by boldface.
TTC practices for misusing scientific evidence, identified through analysis of TTC submission documents.
| Type of Industry Practice | Techniques | |
|
| Misquoting | • Inaccurately reporting objectives, methods, findings, or conclusions of studies |
| Selective quoting | • The ‘tweezers’ method: Reporting extracts out of context in a misleading way by partially quoting and/or omitting qualifying information | |
| Misinterpretation | • Presenting a minor point as a main conclusion• Presenting absence of evidence as evidence of absence | |
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| Seeking methodological perfection | • Insistence on observation of actual behaviour• Exaggerating impact of limitations• Ignoring research governance |
| Insisting on methodological uniformity | • Privileging marketing research• Rejecting qualitative methodology | |
| Adopting the litigation model | • Privileging experts• Piece-by-piece review | |
| Lack of rigour | • Incorrect reading/interpreting of studies• Double standards• Lack of clarity | |
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| Promoting alternative evidence | • Citing behavioural studies of individuals to oppose a population-scale intervention |
| Excluding relevant evidence | • Omitting internal industry research on the role of packaging in marketing | |
Industry critique of Hammond et al, 2011.
| Hammond et al, 2011 | ||
| Devinney (2012) critique | Review of Devinney critique | Practices of mimicked scientific critique |
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| The complexity of smoking uptake decisions and the fact that, for young people, cigarette packs may be proffered by friends rather than purchased appears not to be recognised. Nor does the fact that the outcomes were based on previous research (including tobacco industry market research) and specifically explore the mechanisms through which packaging (and SP) is likely to impact on smoking behaviour. | Insisting on methodological uniformity |
| Behavioural task was used: respondents were asked which, if any, packs they would like to be sent upon conclusion of the study. | Lack of rigour | |
| Studying actual cigarette pack purchasing behaviour or any close incentive compatible proxy among young non-smokers (as included in the Hammond study) is likely to be deemed unethical. | Seeking methodological perfection | |
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| In line with evidence cited by Devinnney that intentions most closely relate to actual purchasing when they are for existing products (p. 12), brands used are real brands. The reality is that male brands are different from female brands and thus the two cannot be both real and identical. | Lack of rigour |
| The above is acknowledged in the paper and for this reason the male brands are excluded from some analyses. | Lack of rigour | |
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| This was not a market research study. | Insisting on methodological uniformity |
| Dichotomous scales were not arbitrarily selected but used to provide a more intuitive metric. Furthermore, all analyses were repeated using both the five-point and the dichotomous outcome variable with the same pattern of results. | Lack of rigour | |
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| Research shows most smokers and non-smokers have knowledge about the health risks of smoking and understand that tar is a toxin in cigarette smoke | Lack of rigour |
| Tobacco companies have used similar measures in their own research. | Lack of rigour | |
| While it is possible that respondents had different conceptualisations of tar and health risk, etc., the differences will be balanced across experimental conditions given participant random allocation. | Lack of rigour | |
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| Packages were rated individually, one at a time, and so the scores were not dependant on the comparator as suggested. | Lack of rigour |
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| This fails to acknowledge the purpose of the study: to test the effect, on young women, of pack design (descriptors, colour and imagery) and of removing these elements (as would occur with SP). Had the intention been to study pack size, price, brand family, etc., and to determine which particular combination was more appealing (as might occur in a market research study), then these should have been balanced as suggested, but it was not. | Insisting on methodological uniformity |
| Instead, and consistent with the study's objectives, the only differences between conditions were the elements being examined (pack design), while other elements (pack size and shape, brand family) were constant and the brands appeared an equal number of times across the three female experimental conditions. | Lack of rigour | |
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| Incorrect interpretation of the study design and objectives as outlined above; all participants in each condition saw the same set of eight packages. | Lack of rigour |
| While market research may have taken a different analytical approach, the critique fails to acknowledge that the between-group analysis in which participants are randomly allocated to groups is designed to reduce bias and that confounding was controlled for in the analysis. | Insisting on methodological uniformity | |
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| Study strengths, including those consistent with the evaluative criteria set (Devinney p. 13–17) were: recent study; question design based on existing research; good sample size; subjects of relevant age (18–19 years); randomisation producing similar groups thus minimising bias; potential confounders controlled for; results statistically significant and consistent; included a behavioural task. | Seeking methodological perfection |
Industry critique of Thrasher et al, 2011.
| Thrasher et al, 2011 | ||
| Devinney (2012) critique | Review of Devinney critique | Practices of mimicked scientific critique |
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| Each participant bid on two packs only, the second revealed only after bidding on the first. The order was randomised & shown to have no effect on bids, suggesting intent was not obvious. | Lack of rigour |
| The study was not completely balanced in that sample sizes for the different attribute levels varied. This will have introduced some statistical inefficiency leading to less power to detect a significant result. This was not mentioned. | Lack of rigour | |
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| Orthogonality is relevant where aim is to assess interactive effects of several components. Study aim was to assess impact of pictorial warnings & added impact of plain packaging, which was achieved. | Lack of rigour |
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| Advantages/disadvantages of multiple experimental designs are subject to debate. | Insisting on methodological uniformity |
| This argument is unclear, e.g.: is Devinney referring just to having cigarettes or also different products in plain packs in his intended design? If all brands are in plain packs, how will plain and ‘plain pack alternatives’ be compared? | Lack of rigour | |
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| Impossible to replicate the real world | Seeking methodological perfection |
| Study limitations acknowledged | Lack of rigour | |
| Fails to acknowledge that the experiment was close to real world (e.g., in grocery stores, real money used, smokers kept the packs), it is still useful in revealing the most likely demand estimate, and that limitations of the experiment were acknowledged. | Seeking methodological perfection | |
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| Study strengths included: behavioural outcome; good sample size; randomisation; similar groups; statistically significant and consistent results. The study met many of the criteria set by Devinney, but this was overlooked. | Seeking methodological perfection |