Technology
newsmonger The Verge should stick to covering cell phones and earbuds. Last week it published a fantastical tale of
e-cigarette intrigue, suggesting the existence of an international tobacco and
vaping industry conspiracy. The article
by Liza Gross (here), richly sourced,
linked my work to this imagined scheme.
I
have always been entirely transparent about my research sponsors.
I have publicly reported that my research at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, from 1999 to 2005, and since at the University of Louisville, has been supported by unrestricted grants to those institutions. The funds are managed according to the institutions’ policies to assure that grantors have no influence on my research products or activities.
I have publicly reported that my research at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, from 1999 to 2005, and since at the University of Louisville, has been supported by unrestricted grants to those institutions. The funds are managed according to the institutions’ policies to assure that grantors have no influence on my research products or activities.
Since
my first publication in tobacco harm reduction (THR) in 1994, I have been
interested in all THR products, regardless of manufacturer. The Verge cited
an “unsolicited” email from me to claim a connection to Reynolds, the marketer
of Eclipse, but I had submitted my note via a blind "Talk to
RJR" email account, as I had no relationship with anyone at the company.
The purpose of my email was to challenge Reynolds for positioning Eclipse as a
lower risk product for smokers. I objected that it was not lower risk,
but rather “a tobacco product which delivers only xx% of (specific toxins) when
compared with currently available products because the tobacco is heated rather
than burned.” I was correcting Reynolds, suggesting they make a reduced
exposure claim rather than a reduced risk claim. Note that when Congress
gave the FDA regulatory authority over tobacco nine years later, it included
both reduced risk and reduced exposure as pathways for Modified Risk Tobacco
Product approval by FDA for product claims by tobacco manufacturers.
As
a result of my email to Reynolds, the company provided a senior scientist to give
a well- received public seminar at the UAB School of Public Health describing the
company’s research and resulting peer-reviewed articles on Eclipse (here).
Elsewhere
in its story, The Verge used half-truths to besmirch me and others with regards
to contact with tobacco companies. For 23 years I have worked with a wide
range of organizations interested in tobacco harm reduction. I generated
peer-reviewed articles and other reports as a scientific advisor for the
American Council for Science and Health, and as a fellow of the Heartland and R
Street Institutes, all without financial remuneration. These activities fall
within my responsibilities as Professor of Medicine and Endowed Chair of
Tobacco Harm Reduction Research at the University of Louisville.
The
dictionary defines “verge” as the edge, rim, or margin of something. Ms. Gross’s article espouses a conspiracy
theory that, in my case, is well beyond the margin of accuracy. Had the author contacted me, I would have
provided the Tobacco Truth.
1 comment:
The piece by "The Verge" that you mention is just a long pile of fake news. The author Liza Gross has no scientific qualifications, she is simply an activist peddling conspiracy theories.
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