Search Results for: warning labels

Ian Irvine, the Foundation for a Smoke-Free World and the CD Howe Institute
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Ian Irvine, the Foundation for a Smoke-Free World and the CD Howe Institute

Over the past months Canadians have heard the views on vaping regulations of Concordia University economist Ian Irvine. Recently the Globe and Mail’s business editor gave space to his opinion that taxes on vaping products should not be so high as to discourage people from using them and that governments should do more to encourage smokers who…

A new year begins… and so do some tobacco-related measures
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A new year begins… and so do some tobacco-related measures

The new year is a common date for governments to peg for implementing regulations or new rules. This year is no exception, with new tobacco control provisions kicking in this week. Other regular New Year’s changes will be price increases set by tobacco companies. This post reviews these events — with related and updated fact…

Active and passive smoking increase the risk of breast cancer: Women need to be warned
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Active and passive smoking increase the risk of breast cancer: Women need to be warned

In 2009, a Canadian expert panel concluded that the relationship between breast cancer and active and passive smoking was “consistent with causality.”  Since then the evidence that smoking and passive smoking cause breast cancer has grown stronger. Breast cancer death and disease from tobacco smoke In Europe in 2017 3,354 breast cancer deaths could have been avoided…

Yet another novel nicotine product on the Canadian horizon: tobacco-less oral tobacco
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Yet another novel nicotine product on the Canadian horizon: tobacco-less oral tobacco

l“An exciting new space” That’s how BAT’s category director Vincent Duhem described Oral Tobacco products to investors earlier this spring. Unlike vaping products, he pointed out, Oral tobacco had assets that other next generation products did not. Unlike vaping products, no device was required and it can be used in places where vaping is not…

Flavourings make e-cigarettes more harmful. That’s another good reason to end their use.
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Flavourings make e-cigarettes more harmful. That’s another good reason to end their use.

Most Canadian governments which have banned flavoured e-cigarettes have done so in order to reduce the number of young people who are brought into nicotine use through the use of attractive flavourings. Vaping manufacturers have objected to these measures, and are claiming that flavours “save lives” because they encourage smokers to switch to e-cigarettes. Missing…

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Archived Press Releases: 2000 – 2017

2017 September 14, 2017  Canadian health groups respond to Philip Morris International’s $1 Billion Research Fund. August 15, 2017  PSC and the Quebec Coalition on Tobacco Control call for an end to the low-tobacco tax policy and the regulation of cigarette pricing. July 11 2017  PSC calls on Minister Philpott to respond to inadequate warnings…