| Literature DB >> 30209207 |
Stella A Bialous1,2, Stanton A Glantz3.
Abstract
There has been a global decline in tobacco consumption that, if continued, will negatively impact the tobacco industry's profits. This decline led the industry to invent and market new products, including heated tobacco products (HTP). HTP are an extension of the industry's strategies to undermine government's tobacco regulatory efforts as they are being promoted as part of the solution for the tobacco epidemic. Under the moniker of 'harm reduction', the tobacco companies are attempting to rehabilitate their reputation so they can more effectively influence governments to roll back existing tobacco control policies or create exemptions for their HTP. Rolling back tobacco control policies will make it easier for the companies to renormalise tobacco use to increase social acceptability for all their products. When regulations are absent or when loopholes exist in classifying HTP as a tobacco product (thus subject to all tobacco control regulations), the industry's marketing of HTP is making these products more visible to the public and more accessible. Governments need to ensure that HTP are regulated as tobacco products or drugs and reject partnerships with the tobacco companies to promote 'harm reduction'. The tobacco companies remain the vector of the tobacco-caused epidemic and cannot be part of the global tobacco control solution. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2018. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: global health; non-cigarette tobacco products; public policy; tobacco industry
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30209207 PMCID: PMC6202178 DOI: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2018-054340
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tob Control ISSN: 0964-4563 Impact factor: 7.552
Availability of HTP by major cigarette company and country of availability (January 2018)
| Company | Product | Year launched | Countries/Comments |
| British American Tobacco | iFuse* glo | 2015 | Romania, Japan, Switzerland, Canada, South Korea, Russia |
| China National Tobacco Corporation / SMTA | Not reported | Not launched | A few of the companies claim to have over 30 patents of HTP and continue to be engaged in research and development of these products. But none yet are in the market. |
| Imperial Brands | Not reported | Not launched | Focusing on e-cigarettes at the moment, claims to have options to launch when it deems that time is right |
| Japan Tobacco International | Ploom TECH† | 2016 | Japan, Switzerland |
| KT&G Corp. | lil | 2017 | South Korea |
| Philip Morris International‡ | IQOS | 2014 | Canada, Guatemala, Colombia, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Israel, Italy, Kazakhstan, Lithuania, Monaco, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland, Ukraine, UK, South Africa, South Korea, Japan, New Zealand |
*It is unclear that iFuse will remain in the market in Romania, where Glo was introduced in 2018.
†Ploom TECH is described as a hybrid between a HTP and a vaporiser. It is to be used with Mevius capsules. Mevius is one of JTI’s best-selling cigarette brands. The capsules contain tobacco which are then heated by vapour.
‡PMI website states that it is developing a new heated nicotine delivery product that has no tobacco, STEEM, among other ‘reduced risk’ products.
§ We do not know what TEEPS stands for, it is not included in the product’s description (https://www.pmi.com/smoke-free-products/teeps-carbon-heated-tobacco-product).
HTP, heated tobacco product.
Figure 1PMI’s tools to expand access to markets for its alleged reduced risk products (Slide 22 of a 125 slide presentation titled ‘Reduced Risk Products Briefing’18) released by Reuters14 as part of a series of reports on PMI activities. PMI, Philip Morris International.