While many American tobacco researchers and policy experts
have, of late, moved to endorse reasonable regulation of e-cigarettes and
vaping, most persist in condemning smokeless tobacco products, which have been proven
to be nearly harmless. It is irrational
to support one and prohibit the other, when both are legitimate harm reduction
options for smokers.
The illogic of this dual position is displayed in the work of
Dr. Dorothy Hatsukami, a prestigious tobacco researcher, author of 250
published articles (here)
and recipient of tens of millions of dollars in NIH funding (available here,
including $13 million to study reducing nicotine in cigarettes). Dr. Hatsukami recently signed a letter to FDA
Commissioner Scott Gottlieb (here)
and published an article in Tobacco
Control (here).
In the letter to the commissioner, Dr. Hatsukami applauded
his “openness to the concept of tobacco harm reduction…There is already a
considerable body of science and experience suggesting that a harm reduction
approach…could yield substantial and highly cost-effective public health benefits…at
this time we do not believe that the current regulatory framework for the
low-risk nicotine products such as e-cigarettes and smokeless tobacco is
appropriate or will deliver the substantial public health benefits we hope and
expect FDA’s oversight will bring.” The
letter encouraged the FDA to regulate tobacco products according to risk and to
“support informed choice through truthful communication of risk.”
However, in her Tobacco
Control commentary, Dr. Hatsukami took a contrary view, fully endorsing the
FDA’s proposed standard for NNN, which I have eviscerated here
and here. She wrote, “If [FDA] puts the proposed rule
into effect, it would be a significant and important step towards minimising
the harms from smokeless tobacco use.”
Surprisingly, she asserted that “the risk for oral cancer is
considerably higher for smokeless tobacco users,” and cited a federal study
documenting that American men who dip or chew tobacco have no mouth cancer risk
(here).
Notably, other signatories to the Gottlieb letter are
genuine tobacco harm reduction advocates who have endorsed the substitution of
smoke-free tobacco by smokers. They
include Clive Bates of the UK and Canada’s David Sweanor, who filed a comment (here)
labeling the NNN rule “reckless and pointless.”
American signatories who are on record about the relative safety of
smokeless are Sally Satel (here
and here),
Kenneth Warner (here
and here), David
B. Abrams (here)
and Raymond S. Niaura (here).
2 comments:
I'm glad to see you're still at it Dr. Rodu. I've been following your blog for awhile now. The amount of people that believe the lies plastered all over their television is just mind blowing. I know that smokeless isn't 100% risk free, nothing is. The way I see it based on the evidence I've been able to find is that you'll probably lose your gums and teeth before you ever actually get cancer directly caused by smokeless. Considering what I KNOW cigarettes were doing to my lungs as evidenced by just walking up stairs, I'd say its a fair trade.
Loren,
Authorities are also misinforming Americans about gum disease and tooth loss. Scientific studies actually show minimal to no risk, as I have discussed here in these blog posts:
https://rodutobaccotruth.blogspot.com/2016/12/fda-rejects-plea-to-correct-smokeless.html
https://rodutobaccotruth.blogspot.com/2011/06/truth-about-federal-warnings-on.html
Post a Comment