:
I want to welcome you all to the health committee today.
We're pleased to have you here to present this morning, pursuant to Standing Order 108(2), the study of the examination of Health Canada's development of new regulations for tobacco packaging warning labels.
From the Department of Health, we have Paul Glover, assistant deputy minister. Welcome again, Paul. So nice to see you here. Cathy Sabiston is director general. Welcome, Cathy. And Jane Hazel is director general. Welcome.
From the Government of Nova Scotia, we have Dr. Robert Strang, chief public health officer. It's very nice to have you here at committee, Dr. Strang. And we have Steve Machat, manager of tobacco control, chronic disease and injury prevention. It's very nice to have you here. Welcome.
We will have 10-minute presentations, and we will begin with Mr. Glover.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
[Translation]
I appreciate the invitation to speak to the Standing Committee on Health regarding the subject of Health Canada's warning messages on cigarette packages.
There has been much media attention to this recently.
As you are aware, the Minister of Health has indicated that the department continues to examine the renewal of health warning messages on tobacco packaging. I am pleased to outline for you today what has been done to date and what remains to be completed on the project.
[English]
Canada is a world leader in tobacco control. I know there are some who will argue that we have slipped a bit; however, no country in the world with a similar political and economic environment has a lower smoking rate than Canada. Only 18% of Canadians smoke, and 13% smoke daily. This is a substantial decline from the over 50% who smoked in 1965.
This did not happen accidentally. Successive tobacco control strategies and actions since the 1990s—a strong Tobacco Control Act, collaborations with provinces, territories, non-governmental organizations, and community organizations, as well as the changing attitudes of Canadians towards smoking—have all contributed to the smoking rate of 18%.
These actions include measures such as taxing tobacco products, banning advertising in newspapers, magazines, television, and radio, ensuring that retailers do not sell to youth, banning smoking in workplaces and public places, making sure that tobacco products are not sold individually, putting health warning messages on tobacco products, creating smoking cessation programs, and legislating the ban on the display of tobacco products at retail venues, as most provinces have done.
[Translation]
This represents a comprehensive and integrated approach to tobacco control that has been undertaken across the country. Canada has a very strong tobacco control environment. We know this from our research that clearly demonstrates that 95% of Canadians know that smoking is bad for them.
[English]
It should come as no surprise that Canada has greatly influenced international tobacco control efforts. Aspects of the World Health Organization's framework convention on tobacco control, an international treaty that now involves 172 countries, was modelled upon Canada's tobacco control activities.
Canada continues to lead the way. The Cracking Down on Tobacco Marketing Aimed at Youth Act, which received royal assent last year, represents another first of its kind in the world and at the country level.
Canada's ban on flavours and additives in little cigars, cigarettes, and blunt wraps recently received acclaim from the 130 countries that participated at the conference of the parties to the framework convention on tobacco control, which was held in November in Uruguay. In fact, the conference of parties agreed to embed this idea as a key best practice for countries to adopt in the guidelines to support the regulation of tobacco contents and emissions, or smoke.
Regarding health warning messages, Canada was the world leader in implementing full-colour pictorial messages covering 50% of cigarette packages in 2000. Many countries have since followed suit.
Canada is also one of the few countries in the world to have rigorously tested the effectiveness of health warning messages. Our results indicate that the messages encourage smokers to quit and discourage youth from starting to smoke.
As an active player in international tobacco control efforts and a leading member of the WHO framework convention on tobacco control, we fully support any country's efforts to implement health warning messages. Where possible, we provide technical assistance as well as the rights to use our graphic health warning messages.
Health warning messages on tobacco packaging are an important tool, but they must be factored into the larger tobacco control strategy. Health Canada is of the view that hard-hitting health warning messages on the dangers of tobacco should not be treated as a stand-alone initiative. The social environment has changed significantly since health warning messages were introduced 10 years ago. Now is a good time to refocus our efforts to ensure the warnings reach the largest numbers of smokers possible, while remaining effective and cost efficient.
While the qualitative and quantitative research conducted in recent years on potential images for new health warning messages has allowed us to refine them and ensure they appeal to a wide spectrum of smokers, we recognize there are better and emerging social marketing techniques that could improve this project. As such, we are examining innovative ways to complement the health warning messages project by strengthening our Internet presence and extending it with social media, such as Twitter and Facebook, to reach more Canadians.
In 2009, 80% of Canadians aged 16 and older, or 21.7 million people, used the Internet. We have not asked smokers which of these channels, or a combination thereof, would be most beneficial to help them quit. We are engaged in policy development and research to determine the best path forward, recognizing that new forms of media offer new opportunities to reach smokers with effective health warning messages that will continue Canada's role as a world leader in tobacco control.
[Translation]
So, is Health Canada committed to revising the health warning messages? Yes. Absolutely. They are one very important and proven effective mechanism in providing information to help people stop smoking.
Health Canada will continue to seek innovative approaches to tobacco control and implement the necessary measures to reduce smoking rates and protect the health of Canadians.
[English]
Thank you. Merci.
We welcome your questions.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair, and thank you to the committee for the invitation to appear today on this very important public health matter to Nova Scotians and to all Canadians.
I would like to take a moment to acknowledge my colleague, Steve Machat, manager of tobacco control for the Department of Health Promotion and Protection, who's attending these hearings with me today. Steve is Nova Scotia's representative on the F/P/T Tobacco Liaison Committee and has been directly involved in the discussions regarding health warnings that have taken place at that committee over the past two to three years.
Before speaking directly to the need to urgently renew health warning labels on tobacco products, I would like to provide some context for the committee.
Tobacco does remain the leading cause of illness and premature death in Canada. Despite common perception, the work in tobacco control is far from done.
Internationally, Canada has been a leader in tobacco control in general and health warning labels in particular, being the first country to require these in 2001. However, as has been outlined in a recent report from the Canadian Cancer Society, Canada has now fallen to 15th alongside 18 other countries when ranked on cigarette package health warnings.
In Canada, we've made substantial progress in tobacco control, reducing our overall smoking rate from 28% in 2000 to 17.5% in 2009, and our youth--which are 15- to 19-year-olds--smoking rate from 28% in 2000 to 13% in 2009. This progress has been the result of a comprehensive, multi-faceted approach with leadership at all three levels of government on critical policy areas such as pricing, advertising, and protection from exposure to second-hand smoke. Leadership from the federal government has been critical and much appreciated in the first two of these areas.
However, much of the decrease in smoking rates occurred from 2000 to 2005, with very little change in smoking rates since then. Tobacco control in Canada has stalled. As long as there's an industry with a mandate to make profits for shareholders from the sale of tobacco products, maintaining our progress to date, let alone achieving further reductions in smoking rates, will require a continuation of the comprehensive, multi-faceted approach with the renewal and change of tactics based on the latest evidence.
In Canada, tobacco product packaging is the key remaining source of tobacco advertising. Renewed health warnings comprising at least 75% of the package space will decrease this advertising, make the health warnings more effective, and provide smokers with a single 1-800-quit line. All this will play a major role in continuing to decrease our smoking rates. That's why the tobacco industry does not want these renewed health warnings and it is exactly why we need to do it now.
Provincial and territorial governments remain puzzled as to why the initiative to renew health warnings was stopped at the last minute, with no consultation. The background work on this initiative, which was shared through the F/P/T Tobacco Liaison Committee, had been completed, and there was no hint of concern or reluctance on the part of Health Canada officials as this work progressed.
It's also extremely disappointing to learn that the tobacco industry was informed about Health Canada's decision several months before provincial-territorial partners or the tobacco control community.
One has to wonder what role the tobacco industry played in the decision not to move ahead with the renewal of health warning labels on tobacco packages. After all, their historic tactics are delay, distract, and distort, and it is known they have access and influence. As was presented recently to this committee, Health Canada held four private meetings with the tobacco industry between November 2009 and May 2010.
The delay in the visual health warning and the toll-free number has only one beneficiary: the tobacco industry.
In addition, Health Canada's rationale for the delay does not stand up to scrutiny either. We do not need more study on the effectiveness of health warnings and the need for Canada's to be renewed. We just need to do it. We do not need more study to further restrict tobacco advertising on tobacco packaging. We just need to do it. We do not need to hold up the renewal of health warnings on cigarette packages while we work to find more effective ways to use the Internet and social media to communicate health warnings and other information about tobacco products. Implementing cigarette package changes can happen now and the remaining complementary approaches can be implemented as they are developed.
Lastly, as important as it is, we cannot focus just on contraband. Contrary to what the aggressive advertising campaign of the tobacco industry would have you believe, the vast majority of cigarettes smoked by young people across Canada are legal. As stated earlier, continued success in tobacco control will require a comprehensive, multi-faceted approach. The best way to prevent contraband use is to prevent people from smoking cigarettes, period, and that's through a comprehensive approach.
The tobacco industry wants and needs to distract us from such an approach because they know it will work to further reduce smoking rates. As an individual whose professional and legal responsibility is to work to protect the health of Nova Scotians, I need to ask why the interests of the tobacco industry are being placed above the health of Canadians and the interests of provincial and territorial governments.
The federal government has shown leadership in tobacco control over many years. Bill is a shining example. It prohibits flavoured tobacco and advertising of such products. Nova Scotia, along with all other provinces and territories, had urged the federal government to address this issue. I am fully aware that Bill C-32 was and continues to be a lightning rod for the global tobacco industry. We know they don't like it. And let me say to the federal government, thank you for staying steadfast and resisting calls to weaken the legislation.
The renewal of health warning labels on tobacco products needs similar political will and leadership. The rationale is clear, the background work has been done, and there are no valid reasons to not move ahead now. Failure to act will weaken the tobacco control efforts of other levels of governments and society, it will create avoidable cost utilization of already stressed provincial and territorial health care systems, and, above all, it will cost lives.
Thank you. We welcome your questions.
Thank you all for coming here.
And thank you, Dr. Strang, for actually providing all of the reasons that the move by this government to stop this project dead in its tracks is a dumb move. I need say no more.
Mr. Glover, you're a civil servant and you're doing your job, but I found your presentation rather intriguing. Dr. Strang said that we are falling behind and you said we're doing fine. Sir, we're not doing fine.
I have some questions for you.
Let me just first say that children or youth or other people don't draw cigarettes out of the computer screen by watching the Internet or BlackBerry screens. They go and buy them, and they need to be presented with those startling images when they purchase those things. So my biases are pretty clear.
I understand that as far back as 2009, Mr. Glover, you were ready to start drafting the regulations. You had, in fact, all of the refreshed and renewed images ready to go.
First of all, I'd ask you to produce, at the earliest possible time, the October 2009 version of those images to this committee and any other later version that you may have prepared.
Secondly, I'd ask you whether or not you did share with the NGOs and other people who worked with you over the years that you were ready to draft the regulations. In fact, I'm told you were actually encouraging those people who work on this issue to start working on the plain packaging as well and removing the brands. Is that true or not?
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Furthermore, with respect to the notion that youth buy these cigarettes, that is absolutely correct. We do have research that shows these images, these health warnings that are on current packages, do work for youth, because they are not stale. This is the first time they are seeing these images, and they continue to be effective for new smokers.
While we recognize that and continue to work to improve the images, to suggest that they are ineffective for everybody would not be consistent with the research that shows that youth who do buy these cigarettes are exposed for the first time to these images and they do have an impact.
With respect to the images we have, those have all been filed with Library and Archives Canada, so all of the public opinion research and all of the archives are already available on that website. We would be happy to provide the link to it. Those are the images that we have been working with, that we continue to work with, and they were part of our briefings to the minister and her staff as we moved forward.
With respect to plain packaging, the department looks at all options, from 50% to 75% to 90%--and plain packaging. That was part of the analysis we did with respect to potential options for the government in our advice as we moved forward.
I believe I've responded to all of the member's questions.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
Mr. Glover, I know that you are not in an easy position. You have to defend a very controversial position. You have to defend the minister's position. People still fail to understand.
If I am not mistaken, the minister said that she wanted to fight contraband tobacco. You said in your opening remarks that warnings on packaging are one tool in the strategy and not the only tool. By the same token, the fight against contraband tobacco is one tool but not the only tool.
When you want to come to grips with a problem as major as tobacco addiction, you have to use all the means at your disposal, from warnings to the fight against contraband. I have real trouble believing that such a huge machine as the Government of Canada is incapable of walking and chewing gum in the same time. That doesn't even occur to me.
Mr. Dosanjh asked the question...and I will take it even further. We can see that, since November 19, the only interest groups that you have met with are those from the tobacco industry. They wanted to meet with you to discuss advertising. They include Small Guys Tobacco Group, Scandinavian Tobacco Group, Imperial Tobacco, Japan Tobacco.
It is astonishing to see that the most recent stakeholders you have met with come from the tobacco industry and now, suddenly, you are cancelling—or at least postponing, as they are saying over at the department—the placement of new warnings on cigarette packaging.
At the very start of your presentation, you told us that Canada is a world leader in warning messages. But, as Mr. Strang mentioned—and I thank him for doing so—we are now ranked 15th out of 18 countries in warnings on packaging.
How can you come to the committee and tell us that Canada is still a world leader?
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Yes, certainly that is one measure. That said, Internet use is skyrocketing at the moment. At the time, that was not one of the measures in the plan. So we have since realized that it is possible to improve our action plan in order to better meet all the challenges that tobacco poses.
[English]
We are addressing legal tobacco and contraband tobacco.
We realized, with the explosion of the Internet.... That's further supported by some of our national anti-drug strategies, where we have comprehensive approaches, with images in movie theatres and posters, including television ads. We have an Internet site and a Facebook site, where youth are now posting their own stories and starting discussions. We have fans. We have different vehicles available to us than there were 10 years ago.
While we've certainly recognized that we were a leader 10 years ago, we're the first to get to this issue. We wanted to make sure we continued to be a world leader, as we were with Bill , the first country to ban flavours in tobacco. Simply renewing health warning messages, which was world-leading 10 years ago, would not be world-leading today.
But more to the point, our objective is not to be world-leading; our objective is to be successful in helping Canadians quit smoking or stop smoking.
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At Health Canada we've traditionally used mass media--TV, radio, and print--to reach our target audiences, and those campaigns have been very effective.
Now we're looking at a whole new world with Web 2.0, where we see that 17.5 million Canadians are current users of Facebook and 21 million Canadians a month are going on YouTube to see online videos. That kind of reach in engagement is phenomenal, and I think it has really expanded the tools we have available to reach Canadians.
As Paul mentioned, at Health Canada we're already using some of those tools in our anti-drug campaign, for example, aimed at youth 13 to 15. We have a Facebook page that has over 22,000 fans. There are ways that youth can give us their own testimonials and other youth can watch them. Those are exciting new things we've been doing that have been showing success.
Last week the minister launched our children's health and safety campaign aimed at giving parents health and safety information. We're really excited by some of the new technology we've been using there. For the first time ever we have QR codes in our print and brochure material. In addition to Facebook, we've launched our first widget and our first mobile application, so now people can have all of our recalls and advisories at hand. So that's quite exciting.
We've developed an electronic handbook that parents can tailor to the needs of their own families and children. So if a parent is worried about bullying, nutrition, obesity, or food allergies, they can tailor this handbook to their own needs.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
And thank you to the witnesses.
I think the point is that we have evidence that warnings work. We know they reduce tobacco use. We know they communicate the health effects of smoking. They increase the number of people who disapprove of smoking. They discourage people from starting to smoke, and they increase the number of people who quit smoking. And with labels, those package warnings reach smokers every day. That evidence does not exist for social media at this point. We're hearing anecdotal evidence of it, but we need evidence-based medicine in Canada.
I would ask if you could please table all of the health warnings prepared by the department. How many warnings were there? We want to see the content. I don't want to be sent to a website; I'd like them tabled, please, with the committee.
I would also ask if you could table with the committee a comprehensive timeline of the discussions with the provinces and territories regarding the quit line and the recommendations concerning the quit line number, including when the provinces were to be ready for an increase in calls and whether the provinces were told to be ready for the quit line number to appear on packs by now, that is, by December 2010.
I would ask if you could table with the committee how and when the decision not to proceed with the new warnings was communicated to departmental staff and to provincial and territorial health ministers, and what reasons were given.
Now, if I may, I would like to ask the officials from Nova Scotia the following. Based on your discussions with Health Canada and prior to the warnings being delayed, when were you told to expect the quit line number to appear on packages and thus of the need to prepare for an increase in calls?
:
Thank you for the question.
I can link it back to the anti-drug campaign, which is what we're active on right now with the younger group, and prevention. We're seeing our multimedia approaches are having phenomenal results.
We've just done some survey work to see what kind of impact we're having, and using a combination of social media plus other traditional social marketing impacts, we're seeing that 25% of youth who either saw our ads or went to the Facebook page--a huge majority who saw the ad were driven to the Facebook page. They engaged, and one out of every four said as a result they were going to take some sort of action, whether it be to talk to their parents, look up some information, or consider saying no.
So those are some of the tangible, real results we're seeing when we launch these multimedia campaigns. Certainly the peer-to-peer interactions that we can make happen through social media are greatly impacting and I think improving the sort of impact we're having.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair, and thank you to members of the committee for the opportunity to address you in relation to your inquiry into the government's decision not to proceed with implementation of Health Canada's tobacco package warnings—the new ones.
I'm the executive director of the Non-Smokers' Rights Association, founded 35 years ago. We are one of only three national organizations that work exclusively in the field of tobacco control.
For members of the committee who are not familiar with our association, we have a small staff of nine people located in offices in Ottawa, Toronto, and Montreal. We have members across Canada. I am proud to say that our association played a significant role in encouraging Parliament to introduce its landmark tobacco advertising ban in 1988 and its two generations of world precedent-setting warnings. We hope the discussion under way here today will now lead to the government revisiting its decision about the refreshed warnings.
As background to my presentation, I was privileged to have been asked by the World Health Organization to write an expert report on tobacco package warnings for that organization. I was deeply involved in the consultations over the refreshed warnings. Along with other members of this panel, I was involved in those consultations. Consequently, we know what has been blocked.
I wish to stress that tobacco warnings are a critical component of any comprehensive tobacco control plan. It is simply wrong to suggest that the utilization of social media, or any other tobacco control strategy, can substitute for an effective, revitalized tobacco package warning system. Tobacco warnings are the core of any comprehensive response to the tobacco epidemic
Let me explain why risk messages on the package in particular are so important and at the same time reveal why the tobacco industry will use almost any means to stop them coming forward.
First, the tobacco package is the core of all tobacco promotion. Everything the industry does to sell its products is centred on the package. All advertising, sponsorships, point-of-purchase displays, billboards--everything is tied to the package design. This is the hub of the wheel. With most of these promotional tools banned in Canada, the package takes on even greater importance. The package design is the industry's principal marketing tool in this country. But also important, what Canada does to warn consumers, especially kids, and to reduce the power of the package to promote sales will influence tobacco policy in countries around the world. That's why the industry will go to any length to block it.
I have told you about the marketing power of the package overall. Here is why the warnings on the package are so important and cannot be replaced by social media, or anything else for that matter.
There are 1.5 billion cigarette packages sold in Canada each year. These packages, even many contraband packages, carry the required warnings. Advertising experts will tell you that each package is a mini billboard. Each package produces what these experts call an advertising impression, just like a roadside billboard produces an advertising impression.
On average, a cigarette package is pulled out of a shirt pocket or a purse 20 times a day, the beautiful package design producing a positive, legitimizing image each time it appears. Conversely, and critically, on average, risk messages warn consumers and deter adolescent smokers or starters 20 times a day. With 1.5 billion packages in circulation each year, the package warning system creates an estimated 30 billion advertising impressions every year. About 30 to 40 billion times a year, the warnings undermine the image that the beautiful package tries to produce, a message that says the product inside the package is legitimate, even though it will kill a whopping one out of two of its long-term users. The package is critical.
In short, the package is the cornerstone of everything the industry does, and because the importance of the package is maintaining normalcy and legitimacy for the product, the industry will threaten litigation, threaten the closure of factories, offer to assist government with its contraband problems, or to withhold that help. It will do whatever it takes to delay, stall, or block improvement to the warning system.
In my statement that's been tabled with the committee, I've reviewed some of the things they've done in the past. I won't go into that now because of time restrictions. The point of reviewing the history of how they've tried to block warnings in the past is to show that effective warnings never materialize without a struggle, and we've seen this.
Once again, members of Parliament are being asked by health interests that are supported by millions of Canadians to work in a non-partisan way to encourage the government to implement these warnings. Because of tobacco industry-caused illness and death that can be prevented, this reform rises above party politics and above the pseudo and often dishonest arguments that tobacco lobbyists have put before well-intentioned legislators.
Our association's position is this. The existing warnings are extremely stale. The refreshed warnings were essentially finished months ago--not perfect, but a significant step forward. Over $3 million will be wasted if they sit on a Health Canada shelf, and if they do, kids will be addicted and they will later die. There is no--
:
Thank you, Madam Chair and members of the committee. My name is Geoffrey Fong. I am a professor of psychology at the University of Waterloo. I am also senior investigator of the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research. Eight years ago, I and my colleagues created the international tobacco control policy evaluation project, or the ITC project, to evaluate the impact of tobacco control policies of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. Since 2003, 172 countries, including Canada, have become parties to the FCTC.
The ITC project is currently evaluating the impact of FCTC policies, such as health warning labels, smoke-free laws, higher taxes, and policies to reduce contraband across 20 countries using state-of-the-art longitudinal surveys of adult smokers. In Canada we have conducted the ITC survey for seven annual survey waves since 2002. The ITC project is recognized throughout the world as a leading source for evidence on the effectiveness of tobacco control policies. Last year the ITC project was honoured by CIHR and the CMAJ with a top Canadian achievement in health research award.
I am grateful for the opportunity to speak to you today about health warnings and to present evidence from our ITC project, showing definitively that the Canadian warnings have become less effective over time and that there is an urgent need to revise them now.
The overall objective of health warnings is to inform and educate people about the harms of tobacco products to inspire smokers to quit and to convince non-smokers, especially youth, not to start. The health warning is a health communication very much like an advertisement for public health, and as Gar has mentioned, a potentially powerful one, given the number of exposures, all in the right place, that is, on the pack.
Therefore, governments should endeavour to make the health warnings as strong as possible and to follow the principles of good communication and advertising in their design and implementation. I would like to highlight two such principles.
First, it is clear from many studies, including those conducted by Health Canada itself, that when it comes to warnings, size matters. Warnings will have more impact if they occupy 75% of the pack than if they occupy 50%. In fact, even from Health Canada's own studies, they looked at 90% warnings, and those were significantly more effective than the 75%.
Second, health warnings, like any other communication or advertisement, become less effective over time. This phenomenon--a very intuitive phenomenon--is known as “wear-out”. Thus, health warnings, like any other advertisement, must be revised on a regular basis to maintain their effectiveness. FCTC guidelines suggest that warnings be revised every one to three years. But 10 years, by any stretch of the imagination, is way too long. What would a marketing expert say about an ad campaign that was running unchanged for 10 years straight?
In October 2002, about two years after Canada introduced the graphic warnings, we began the ITC Canada survey, a nationally representative sample of 2,000 adult smokers throughout Canada.
I have prepared a document here--there will be a test on this later--showing how seven key indicators of health warning effectiveness have changed from 2002 to 2008. The ITC survey shows that every indicator of label effectiveness has declined dramatically.
Chart 2, on the first page, shows that the percentage of Canadian adult smokers noticing the warnings labels a lot declined from 60% in 2002 to 42% in 2008.
Chart 4, on the first page, shows that the percentage of smokers reporting that the warnings made them think about the health risks of smoking dropped from 17% to 12%.
On the second page, on the last row, chart 7 shows that the percentage of smokers reporting that the warnings made them forgo a cigarette fell from 18% to 13%. This is an important indicator because it is linked to future quit attempts.
Finally, chart 8, which summarizes all of the seven key indicators of label effectiveness, displays, of course, the steep decline.
These findings show clearly that the effectiveness of what once were the world-leading warnings labels from Canada have declined dramatically. In terms of odds ratios, I would say the effectiveness of the Canadian warnings has declined by 30% to 60% over the past six to seven years.
But it's not just the decline in effectiveness that has occurred. Today we know a lot more about the health consequences of cigarettes and how to communicate those risks. In 2000, many of the images that are still on the packs were of disembodied brains and hearts and lungs.
There are other effective ways of creating warnings that could create powerful emotions, which is a key ingredient of label effectiveness. For example, Health Canada has considered using the photo of Barb Tarbox as a way of depicting the human tragedy of cigarette use. By doing so, Canada would reassert its claim to be a world leader in health warnings.
As the ITC findings show, Health Canada's delay is having a pronounced detrimental effect on the tobacco control policy that is the key to informing the Canadian people. From these ITC charts I have presented, we can estimate that over three-quarters of a million Canadian smokers are no longer reading the warnings closely. From these results, we know that for over a quarter of a million smokers, the warnings are no longer making them think about the health risks of smoking.
If the warnings are not revised, fewer smokers will be inspired to quit, and greater numbers of youth will start smoking, undeterred by the stale 10-year-old warning labels. And in the future, the consequences of today's inaction and delay will result in many additional Canadian deaths from tobacco, which still, of course, is the number one preventable cause of death and morbidity in our country.
From the evidence, from state-of-the art longitudinal surveys of the evaluation of the Canadian warnings, there is no justification for delaying the revision of the health warnings and there is every reason for moving ahead quickly on the revision process.
I would like to thank the committee for this opportunity to speak on this matter.
:
Good afternoon. My name is Rob Cunningham. I am a lawyer and senior policy analyst at the Canadian Cancer Society.
[English]
Health Canada has completed excellent research on new package health warnings, a crucial pillar of Canada's comprehensive tobacco control strategy. The Canadian Cancer Society recommends that the government introduce as soon as possible a new series of warnings covering 75% of the package, front and back, as well as a series of improved messages inside packages.
Before continuing, I would like to extend praise to Minister Aglukkaq and to the Prime Minister for bringing forward Bill last year, and to express appreciation to all political parties for their support of the bill, including the MPs here today who were on the health committee at that time. The legislation banning flavours in cigarettes and little cigars is the best of its kind in the world. Bill C-32 recently proved influential in the adoption of new international guidelines on flavoured tobacco products.
This newly released Canadian Cancer Society report, “Cigarette Package Health Warnings: International Status Report”, shows that Canada is increasingly falling behind other countries. In 2001, Canada was the first country with picture warnings, and Canada had the largest warnings, at 50%. Now 39 countries and territories have picture warnings, and many of the countries requiring picture warnings after Canada are now on their second, third, or fourth round of pictures. For size, Canada has fallen from first to fifteenth in the international rankings, with more countries leap-frogging over Canada all the time. Uruguay has the largest warnings at 80%, with Honduras also about to have 80%. That's Uruguay and Honduras.
Australia has decided to go even further and require plain packaging. That is, maintaining health warnings but removing all brand colours and logos from packages. Warning size is crucial. The larger the size, the larger the impact. As a bilingual country, Canada needs more space than most other countries.
The tobacco industry will undoubtedly bring forward legal arguments against larger warnings. But such arguments would be entirely without merit. As a lawyer focusing in this area, I know the tobacco industry always attempts to bring forward legal arguments to block legislation. For the existing 50% package warnings, when they were brought forward a decade ago, the industry claimed that the warnings could not be justified legally. However, in 2007, the Supreme Court of Canada soundly and unanimously rejected the industry's claims. The industry simply cannot be believed.
When picture warnings were initially considered in 2000, incredibly the industry argued that it was technically impossible in Canada to print colour pictures on cigarette packages. Imagine! But of course the impossible proved possible and picture warnings were easily printed, as we see today.
We join with provincial health ministers in supporting the inclusion of a quit line number on every package as part of warning messaging. This toll-free number would make it easier for smokers, including residents of rural and remote areas, to get help in quitting from trained specialists. The experience in other countries is that quit line calls increase substantially once the number is on the package.
Contraband is an important issue, and governments should take action. But as newspaper editorials have stated, the government should take action on both contraband as well as new warnings. It's also worth nothing that contraband volumes in Canada have decreased dramatically over the last 18 months, and that cigarettes with required package warnings represent the overwhelming volume of sales in Canada. Tobacco products are the leading preventable killer of Canadians. We need a multifaceted approach.
Last week the minister identified social media as a means to reach youth. There is potential here. Indeed the Canadian Cancer Society's smoking cessation services already use social media: Facebook, Twitter, text messaging, and web-based messaging. Social media, however, should be used in addition to warnings. It should not be a substitute. Social media should not delay warnings. Both social media and warnings should be used, and each could enhance the impact of the other. A web address on the package could provide a link to and increase the impact of social media.
It must be emphasized that package warnings have credible and unparalleled exposure, reaching every smoker every day, as well as individuals around smokers: friends, family, co-workers.
Tobacco companies oppose larger 75% warnings knowing full well that warnings will reduce tobacco sales. But that is exactly the point.
[Translation]
Well-designed warnings increase awareness of the health effects of tobacco and decrease consumption, among both adults and youth.
In conclusion, we reiterate our considered recommendation that the government proceed on a pressing basis with new, improved 75% picture warnings that include a toll-free (1-800) quit line number and a web address, as well as with improved interior messages.
Merci. Thank you.
:
When I was listening to the testimony in the last hour, I was reminded of what I remember, as I'm getting older, of the situation in the sixties, seventies, and early eighties, when there wasn't political will to support tobacco control or clamp down on tobacco marketing. Health ministers were left kind of twisting in the wind, so they would latch on to what there was political will to do, which in those days was to educate young people. The results for public health were disastrous, because many people started smoking. It took decades to prove that these other systems--school-based programs and so forth--were ineffective, and a whole generation was lost.
It's ineffective and wrong-headed to put the burden of responsibility on the shoulders of young people to access information and use it properly. The responsibility should be on the shoulders of the adults in the system--the governments and the companies that have the responsibility to regulate and to be regulated. Let's be clear: the government can't Twitter or Facebook its way out of its regulatory responsibilities.
Focusing on youth is not a very good public health strategy, as 94% of smokers are over 20 years old and four out of five smokers are over 24 years old. Adult smokers are the ones looking to quit who need information and help. They deserve to have renewal as well.
Reference was made that 21,000 kids, due to the drug strategy, are latching on to Facebook. Well, that's less than 1% of Canadians between 12 and 19 years old. Health Canada doesn't have a good track record in reaching young Canadians. There's no research basis for suspending proven methods to go to an undeveloped, unresearched, unknown quantity. I think I heard reference to the fact that they might even want to abandon the work they developed over the years and take time to rework images and text. That would result in a delay of three or four years before we'd be in a position....
There are many ways of saying no, and I think today we are being told “not yet”, and we'll wait one more year, two more years, or three more years before the department is ready to come forward with something. But we know they're actually ready to go now, because they shared things with us last year. What they shared with us last year are not things that were tabled in the committee and they are not available in the public archives.
Delaying to use social media will not protect youth; it will harm youth, because it will delay putting on package warnings. Health Canada did pioneering research. They took the existing warnings and moved them from 50% to 75% to 90% to 100% of the package. These were familiar warnings. They found that just increasing the size made young people and young adults say they were more likely to reduce tobacco use. They were better at communicating the health effects of smoking, and they increased the number of people who disapproved of smoking—and that goes back to the social networking. They discouraged people from starting to smoke and increased the number of people who quit smoking. They also found that plain packaging was an equally effective way with young people.
So the government knows what to do. They know they should increase the size of the warnings and take the branding off. Other research recently published from New Zealand with young adult smokers shows exactly the same thing.
I think there are two issues at play here. One is the health warnings—why they were delayed and what should happen now. But the other is perhaps a bigger issue: the integrity of the health regulation and the protection of public health and safety from commercial interference.
The problems, at least until last year, were not with Health Canada. They did a very good job of consulting with us and others and doing the research. There were delays. This work was done under five health ministers between 2003 and 2005. Much of the research had to be suspended during election periods, when they couldn't do public opinion research. But they soldiered on in an excellent way. I may have had some frustrations, but I had no major complaints about the way the file was treated then. But something happened after this file left Health Canada, and that has been our challenge.
Health Canada manages the development of regulations for many other products in addition to tobacco: therapeutic drugs and devices, foods, pesticides, cosmetics, consumer products, and others. What happens when Health Canada scientists recommend a regulatory action and it's overruled outside of Health Canada? This should be a major concern to the committee, and it should be a major concern to parliamentarians and all Canadians.
In many ways this file exposes the vulnerability of the health protection system to commercial pressure. We urge you to support the government to protect health and accelerate the implementation of the warnings that have been developed.
Thank you.
Thank you very much to all of you for coming here and sharing your thoughts with us.
Ms. Callard and others, including Mr. Mahood, you received documentation or material from Health Canada in your consultations, including possibly what was called a resource book, planned as early as October 2009, with images. I would urge you, as a member of the committee, to table those documents here. Once these are requested, you then have the obligation and the right to be able to do that. So I would urge you to provide the committee with all of the materials you may have received over the years as the research was going on and your conversations with the committee were continuing, including the images you might have in your possession that they developed. Thank you.
I only have three or four questions, and I'd like to have some brief answers.
I understand from the log that we received with respect to lobbying that on May 26, 2010, at least one of the big tobacco companies was advised that the regulations were suspended, or the regulatory project was suspended.
I'd like to know whether any of you, in your subsequent conversations with Health Canada or with anyone else related to Health Canada, including the PCO and PMO, had ever been advised that this work had been suspended, until the minister said so at the health ministers' meeting.
:
An honest answer would be that the department knows full well the importance of plain and standardized packaging, but the enthusiasm was especially significant for standardized packaging, because the multitude of packages in the marketplace makes it very, very difficult to draft regulations for regulating this industry when it comes to packaging.
One package that I believe may be here today has eight sides. I'm not a lawyer—Rob is a lawyer—but I wouldn't want to draft that particular regulation.
But more than that, what happens, of course, is that by having an eight- or six-sided package, you reduce the size of the major face, so you can in fact very artfully decrease the size and impact of the warning and increase the beauty and allure of the package, because there's more space then going to the other five or six or seven sides of the package—or four or six sides. You see, it's so complicated, I can't even get the numbers out properly relating to the sides of the packages.
But the fact is that standardized packaging is absolutely critical and meshes perfectly with plain packages, which is where the whole world is going. And Health Canada will have to go there, but we first have to get rid of the stale packages and get these out.
I must say, I echo what Cynthia Callard said, that the department, in my opinion, was completely committed to doing a good job on this. I believe there are all kinds of members of the government who would like to see this come forward. That's why it should be non-partisan and we should get this out in a heck of a hurry.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
I would like to thank the witnesses here today. It is very helpful for the committee.
Ms. Callard, you said earlier that, some years ago, there was no political will to solve this problem. That is perhaps what you are sensing at the moment. I share your indignation with the situation. Let me remind you that there are members of Parliament who do have the political will.
Mr. Fong, you made an extremely interesting comment that is very relevant to the committee. You said that, like any communication, health warnings become less effective over time. I must say that you do not need to be a psychology professor or an eminent economics professor to understand that. What surprises me is that the government doesn't seem to understand.
However, in a final report prepared for Health Canada by the firm Corporate Research Associates Inc, it says that, although some health warning messages stand out, their impact decreases and, sometimes, they are completely ignored. Let me read a passage from the report to you: “A major factor is the novelty of warnings against health hazards, since messages have a greater effect when they are new.”
Can you comment on that for us?
:
Thank you for the opportunity to comment on this.
Yes, novelty is important, because when messages are repeated over and over again, naturally, they are going to lose their effectiveness.
The evidence shows very clearly, and it's one of the basic principles of communication, that you have to change your message over time. It's so basic that it's hardly even worth mentioning. I'm sure, of course, Health Canada knows about the importance of “wear-out” and the decline in the message's effectiveness, and that's why they should be moving forward with these warnings.
So it's a very powerful principle, and it's realized in the ITC data, which show there's no other explanation for this than “wear-out”. Yes, the warnings have become significantly less effective.
:
Thanks very much, Madam Chair. I'm going to be sharing my time with Mr. Brown. If I natter on too long, perhaps you can stop me so he has a couple of minutes.
Thanks to our witnesses for being here this afternoon. Certainly you've brought some interesting perspectives to the table, and we appreciate the time you've taken to bring that forward.
I expect that most of you were in the room during the first panel of presentations, although I'm not quite sure. Yes, I see lots of nods there.
I just want to quote from Mr. Paul Glover's presentation. He said, “As you are aware, the Minister of Health has indicated that the department continues to examine the renewal of health warning messages on tobacco packaging.” Then he also says, “Is Health Canada committed to revising the health warning messages? Yes. Absolutely. They are one very important and proven effective mechanism in providing information to help people stop smoking.”
So I think it's been very clear from what the officials have said here today and from what the minister has told us at a previous meeting that this definitely is not an issue that has been put to bed. This is an issue that is very much still under review. Certainly they're working on it.
Some of the questions that came up at the previous panel talked a bit about consultation from the department. A couple of you here today have indicated that—I don't know if they were in working groups specifically—you were working with Health Canada.
Could you confirm that you had been helping out, and to what extent you had been working with them, please?
Mr. Mahood.