CASAA to FDA’s TPSAC: PMI’s modified risk claims should go further!

Full text of statement below.

Please note that a portion of our statement was omitted during the presentation due to time constraints. In the interest of transparency, we have included the omitted COI statement here.


January 25, 2018

Testimony Delivered to FDA Tobacco Product Scientific Advisory Committee (TPSAC)

RE: PMI IQOS Modified Risk Tobacco Application

— —

Members of the committee,

Good morning and thank you for the opportunity to speak with you today. My name is Alex Clark and I am the executive director of The Consumer Advocates for Smoke- free Alternatives Association. We are a 501(c)(4) nonprofit consumer organization with a membership of more than 200,000 consumers from all walks of life.

[[Original text not included in presentation due to time constraint]

By way of information, CASAA accepts donations from many sources and has no financial or policy agreements with industry stakeholders. In 2017, CASAA received a one-time, completely unrestricted contribution from Philip Morris International. CASAA’s policy for allocating resources is that all contributions are used for efforts that will maximize consumer access to and awareness of low-risk, smoke-free nicotine and tobacco products.]

I am here today to express CASAA’s support for PMI’s MRTP application as we agree that IQOS marketing should accurately inform consumers of the relative low risk of using this heat-not-burn tobacco product.

CASAA believes that consumers deserve honest and accurate risk communication about the products they use so they can make informed choices.

However, our support for PMI’s applications is not without concern. Specifically, we draw attention to the statement that  “scientific studies have shown that switching completely from cigarettes to the IQOS system can reduce the risks of tobacco related diseases.”

In our written comment we provide a footnote to this statement expressing our objection to the use of the term “tobacco related disease.”

To echo the recent statements made by Director Zeller and Commissioner Gottlieb regarding nicotine, CASAA believes that we must update the language we use to discuss the harms of smoking.

Broadly referring to the health consequences of smoking as “tobacco related harm” misinforms the public by wrongfully implying that all tobacco products carry the same risks as smoking. It is imperative that we have a constructive conversation about the relative risks of nicotine delivery products and consistency in our communications about the risks of consuming different tobacco products.

To underscore this point, the other statements that PMI is seeking approval for are consistent among one another in their focus on the fact that IQOS reduces the production of and exposure to harmful and potentially harmful constituents. PMI is not seeking approval to market IQOS as an alternative to low-risk products like smokeless tobacco, vapor products, or other smoke-free nicotine products. Therefore, marketing claims should not reference an outdated and politically motivated understanding of tobacco related harm. IQOS is a lower-risk alternative to smoking and marketing statements should narrowly focus on this fact.

CASAA strongly recommends that PMI amend the their proposed marketing language to read “smoking related diseasesand  that FDA allow this small but vital change.

We also question the wisdom of PMI’s self-imposed prerequisite that a consumer must be a smoker in order to purchase IQOS. It is unclear from the application materials whether or not IQOS might provide a protective or deterrent effect for at-risk never-smokers or former smokers who might relapse. CASAA believes that enforcing a “smoker test” may ignore a small but not insignificant group of consumers who are (for whatever reason) contemplating starting smoking and should have access to low-risk products instead of feeling that smoking is their only option.

Again, thank you for the opportunity to speak with you today and we urge the committee to issue a favorable recommendation to FDA regarding approval of PMI’s MRTP applications for the IQOS System.

  • Meeting materials for this TPSAC meeting are available here.

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in All posts, e cigarettes, iqos, modified risk, News, Smokeless Tobacco, TPSACX, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on CASAA to FDA’s TPSAC: PMI’s modified risk claims should go further!

CASAA to Address TPSAC Regarding Modified Risk Product

(Silver Spring, MD)

On January 24-25, 2018, the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee (TPSAC) will discuss modified risk tobacco product applications (MRTPAs), submitted by Philip Morris Products S.A. for the IQOS Heatsticks systems. TPSAC reviews and evaluates safety, dependence, and health issues relating to tobacco products and provides appropriate advice, information and recommendations to the Commissioner of Food and Drugs. IQOS is a “heat not burn” technology that will​ ​benefit​ ​the​ ​health​ ​of​ ​the population​ ​as​ ​a​ ​whole.​ As with vapor products and smoke-free tobacco, IQOS does not expose consumers to the greatest source of health risk associated with tobacco: the smoke.

CASAA submitted a comment to TPSAC in support of MRTPA on January 3rd, which can be read in full below or click here. CASAA CEO Alex Clark has been accepted to address the Committee during the public comment period on January 25th. To watch the proceedings live, click the links below. (A free download of Adobe Connect is required to view the live stream.)

Wednesday, January 24th, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
https://www.fda.gov/AdvisoryCommittees/Calendar/ucm584231.htm

Thursday, January 25th, 8:00 AM – 3:00 PM (Public comment begins at 8:00 AM)
https://www.fda.gov/AdvisoryCommittees/Calendar/ucm584334.htm

TPSAC MRTP Application Philip Morris

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: KNoll-Marsh

Posted in Alex Clark, All posts, e cigarettes, News, news-all, Smokeless Tobacco, TPSAC, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on CASAA to Address TPSAC Regarding Modified Risk Product

Modernize the Predicate Date for Vapor Products!

By January 19th, Congress will need to come up with a plan to continue funding the government. This could be just another continuing resolution or we could be looking at real budget talks happening in the coming weeks. In either case, today, we have an opportunity to urge support for predicate date change language in the appropriations side of the 2018 budget.

Sending this message to Congress is even more important now in the wake of rogue efforts by some in the industry who don’t understand the need to modernize the 2007 predicate date. Their fundamental misunderstanding of the Cole-Bishop language in the appropriations bill (Sec. 753) is creating confusion among our supporters and eroding relationships that have taken years to build.

At the same time, those of you who live in districts represented by a co-sponsor of the stand-alone version of the predicate date change (HR 1136) will be sending a thank you message. As much as some in Congress need encouragement to support us, those who are already on our side need to hear that we support them.

Help us show Congress that we are unified in our support for changing the predicate date to August 8th, 2016 and that we are in favor of reasonable regulation that preserves consumer choice.

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: KNoll-Marsh

Posted in All posts, Calls To Action, e cigarettes, FDA-CTA-current, FED-CTA-current, News, Smokeless Tobacco, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on Modernize the Predicate Date for Vapor Products!

CASAA Submits Comment to OMB Regarding CDC Campaign

Focus put on misleading “Tips From Smokers” campaign

In October 2017 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) submitted an information collection request titled “National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System” to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval. The OMB subsequently requested comment from the public to determine whether or not the collection and evaluation of information generated from the CDC’s National Tobacco Prevention and Control Public Education Campaign (“The Campaign”) should continue to receive funding.

CASAA took this opportunity to make a strong statement condemning the misleading “Tips From Smokers” campaign, which included ads such as the ad pictured at the right. That particular ad included an accompanying story that stated “Months after using e-cigarettes, she ended up in the hospital with a collapsed lung…. Such wording was clearly an attempt to link her medical condition to the use of vapor products, rather than the fact that she continued to smoke up until her hospitalization.

In our comment to OMB, CASAA  noted:

  • The Campaign features misleading and inaccurate claims.
  • The Campaign is ineffective as designed and reported to date.
  • The Campaign does not adequately address the public health needs in that it promotes abstinence only, ignoring the lower opportunity costs along a continuum of risk reduction. 

CASAA recommended that The Campaign, “Tips from a Former Smoker,” be suspended and reworked to more adequately and truthfully educate the public. This will empower the smoking public to make a more informed choice about their tobacco use and health decisions.

CASAA strongly urged OMB to deny CDC’s request:

“It is time for the CDC to face the fact that The Campaign is inadequate to the task of promoting harm reduction in the smoking population. It is time that CDC change its focus from a nearly religious adherence to abstinence and align its mission with the core principle of public health – reduce the harm to the whole population, including smokers, through the promotion of harm reduction policies. It could do this best by recalling and retooling The Campaign towards promoting less harmful alternatives to combustible tobacco rather than presenting smokers with “Quit or Die” propaganda.”

The comment may be read here in its entirety:

Comment on CDC FR 2017-21122Comment on CDC FR 2017-21122.docx

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: KNoll-Marsh

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No Current Calls to Action Shown?

Check out the 2018 States Legislatative Calendar to find out when your state legislature will be back in session!

State Regular Session Start Regular Session End House Bill Intro Deadline Senate Bill Intro Deadline Crossover Deadline
Alabama Jan 9, 2018 Apr 24, 2018 * 24th Legislative Day 26th Legislative Day
Alaska Jan 16, 2018 Apr 15, 2018 * Feb 23, 2018 Feb 23, 2018
Arizona Jan 8, 2018 Apr 28, 2018 * Feb 5, 2018 Jan 29, 2018 Not yet announced
Arkansas Feb 12, 2018 Mar 14, 2018 * Feb 26, 2018 Feb 26, 2018
California Jan 3, 2018 Aug 31, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Jan 31, 2019
Colorado Jan 10, 2018 May 9, 2018 * 22nd legislative day 17th legislative day 50th legislative day
Connecticut Feb 7, 2018 May 9, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Not yet announced
Delaware Jan 9, 2018 Jun 30, 2018 *
Washington DC Jan 2, 2018 Dec 31, 2018 *
Florida Jan 9, 2018 Mar 9, 2018 * Jan 9, 2018 Jan 9, 2018
Georgia Jan 8, 2018 Mar 31, 2018 * 30th legislative day 30th legislative day 30th legislative day
Hawaii Jan 17, 2018 May 3, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Not yet announced
Idaho Jan 8, 2018 Mar 30, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced
Illinois Jan 10, 2018 May 31, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Not yet announced
Indiana Jan 2, 2018 Mar 16, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Not yet announced
Iowa Jan 8, 2018 Apr 17, 2018 * Jan 19, 2018 Jan 19, 2018 Feb 23, 2018
Kansas Jan 8, 2018 Apr 17, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Not yet announced
Kentucky Jan 2, 2018 Apr 13, 2018 * Feb 26, 2018 Feb 28, 2018
Louisiana Mar 12, 2018 Jun 4, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Not yet announced
Maine Jan 3, 2018 Apr 18, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Not yet announced
Maryland Jan 10, 2018 Apr 9, 2018 * Feb 9, 2018 Feb 5, 2018 Mar 19, 2018
Massachusetts Jan 3, 2018 Jul 31, 2018 * May 1, 2018 May 1, 2018 Not yet announced
Michigan Jan 10, 2018 Dec 31, 2018 * Not yet announced
Minnesota Feb 20, 2018 May 21, 2018 * Not yet announced
Mississippi Jan 2, 2018 Apr 1, 2018 * Jan 15, 2018 Jan 15, 2018 Mar 22, 2018
Missouri Jan 3, 2018 May 11, 2018 * Mar 1, 2018 Mar 1, 2018 Mar 15, 2018
Montana
Nebraska Jan 3, 2018 Apr 18, 2018 * Jan 18, 2018 Jan 18, 2018
Nevada
New Hampshire Jan 3, 2018 Jun 30, 2018 * Jan 4, 2018 Mar 22, 2018
New Jersey Jan 9, 2018 Jan 14, 2020 *
New Mexico Jan 16, 2018 Feb 15, 2018 * Jan 31, 2018 Jan 31, 2018
New York Jan 3, 2018 Jan 2, 2019 *
North Carolina May 16, 2018 Jun 30, 2018 * Jun 7, 2018 Jun 7, 2018 Not yet announced
North Dakota
Ohio Jan 2, 2018 Dec 31, 2018 *
Oklahoma Feb 5, 2018 May 25, 2018 * Jan 18, 2018 Jan 18, 2018 Mar 15, 2018
Oregon Feb 5, 2018 Mar 9, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Not yet announced
Pennsylvania Jan 2, 2018 Nov 30, 2018 *
Rhode Island Jan 2, 2018 Jun 30, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Not yet announced
South Carolina Jan 9, 2018 May 10, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Apr 10, 2018
South Dakota Jan 8, 2018 Feb 1, 2018 * Feb 1, 2018 Feb 1, 2018 Feb 23, 2018
Tennessee Jan 9, 2018 Apr 27, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced
Texas
Utah Jan 22, 2018 Mar 8, 2018 * Feb 1, 2018 Feb 1, 2018 Mar 8, 2018
Vermont Jan 3, 2018 May 4, 2018 * Not yet announced Jan 9, 2018 Not yet announced
Virginia Jan 10, 2018 Mar 17, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Not yet announced
Washington Jan 8, 2018 Mar 8, 2018 * Not yet announced Not yet announced Not yet announced
West Virginia Jan 10, 2018 Mar 10, 2018 * Feb 20, 2018 Feb 19, 2018 Feb 28, 2018
Wisconsin Jan 16, 2018 May 9, 2018 *
Wyoming Feb 12, 2018 Mar 15, 2018 * Not yet announced Feb 16, 2018 Not yet announced

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: KNoll-Marsh

Posted in All posts, e cigarettes, News, noCTA, Smokeless Tobacco, Uncategorized, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on No Current Calls to Action Shown?

#VapesGiving – 2017!

CASAA is thrilled and honored to be a participating member of the inaugural fundraising event, #VapesGiving.

Hosted by the American Vaping Association (AVA), funds collected during #VapesGiving (December 13 – 19) will be distributed to more than twenty state and national associations working tirelessly to defend access to vapor products.

Because of a generous commitment from Naked 100, contributions through #VapesGiving will be matched dollar-for-dollar up to $190,000! Factoring in the matching commitment from Naked, #VapesGiving has already raised more than $10,000 in less than 24-hours!

Please help us make this inaugural event a resounding success by sharing this campaign with everyone you know who cares about access to low-risk, smoke-free vapor products.

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in All posts, e cigarettes, News, news-all, Smokeless Tobacco, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on #VapesGiving – 2017!

We are a united front!

Dear Members of the Vapor Community:

We write you today as a united front because the vapor industry is under attack and the future remains uncertain. We are all focused on the critical mission of making sure that Americans will continue to have access to the full range of vapor products that millions are using to quit smoking and improve our lives. We need your help to achieve this mission.

We all agree that there are short term and long term policy changes that must be made to ensure a robust vapor product industry in this country, but we are focused today on a near-term step — Changing the “Predicate Date” in Congress — which will allow all products on the market before 8/8/2016 to stay on the market and remain available to consumers.

The US House of Representatives has passed an appropriations bill which contains language that would modernize the 2007 predicate date for products newly deemed to be tobacco. But the Senate has not included similar language in its version of the bill. These two conflicting pieces of legislation will be negotiated in Congress in the near future, and we are going to need EVERYONE to weigh in!

In the coming days and weeks, we will be reaching out to our respective members with additional opportunities and guidance on how you can engage with your two Senators and your Representative and urge them to modernize the predicate date for vapor products. We hope that when we call on you, you will take a few minutes to ACT to save the vapor industry.

Thank you!


Related

  • Urge Congress to Support Cole-Bishop! (Click Here)
  • Say thank you to HR 1136 co-sponsors! (Click Here)

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in All posts, e cigarettes, News, Smokeless Tobacco, Uncategorized, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on We are a united front!

NY – Onondaga Co. – Stop Tobacco (and Vapor) 21!

The Onondaga County Legislature is being pressured to consider and adopt a bill that would raise the age to purchase all vapor and tobacco products from 19 to 21-years-old.

Although no bill has been introduced, local anti-smoking activists recently organized to promote the policy. The policy is also being promoted by Onondaga County Health Commissioner, Indu Gupta.

Onondaga County already has a minimum tobacco purchase age of 19, which is higher than most of the rest of the state.

Please take this opportunity, before a bill is introduced, to reach out to county legislators and urge them to reject the Tobacco 21 proposal

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Did you find this alert helpful? Please consider making a donation to CASAA. We rely on contributions to provide timely information and engagements to help protect everyone’s access to life-saving, low-risk nicotine and tobacco products.
CASAA is 501(c)(4) tax-exempt organization. While CASAA is a non-profit organization and pays no income taxes on the donations it receives, contributions or gifts to CASAA are not deductible by the donor as charitable contributions for federal income tax purposes.

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in Active, All posts, Calls To Action, CTA, e cigarettes, Local Alert, New York, News, NY-CTA-current, Onondaga County, Smokeless Tobacco, Tobacco 21, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on NY – Onondaga Co. – Stop Tobacco (and Vapor) 21!

11.21.2017 – JBC: A harm reduction conversation with a Family Nurse Practitioner

Two weeks ago, I started a series of sit-downs with licensed health care providers on the topic of harm reduction, that either I currently work with, or in some cases have worked with. Since I started last week with the most difficult of the interviews, I will post this week about the easiest and most encouraging.

This person is a Board Certified Family Nurse Practitioner that has been licensed for 9 years. In those 9 years, she has worked in Women’s Health and a non-profit specializing in care for people with HIV/AIDS. I asked the same questions of her about harm reduction in general, as well as how it could be applied to tobacco harm reduction that I did with the Physician that I interviewed the week before:

I started with the questions about harm reduction with HIV/AIDS and gave her the statistics(which I think she is more familiar with than I) about the huge reduction in the numbers of deaths and new cases currently as opposed to the numbers at the height of the epidemic. If you didn’t catch it last week, at the height of the epidemic in the 80’s and early 90’s, about 50,000 people a year died from HIV/AIDS-related illnesses. Currently, the number is about 12,000 per year. My first question was, “What thing or things do you think got us to the reduction in numbers?”. She answered, “Education, testing, prevention, better medications, harm reduction services like condoms and needle exchanges, and most importantly, normalizing the conversations and getting rid of the social stigma, particularly among healthcare providers.” (This is already so much easier than the doctor last week whose first answer was “abstinence”).

I asked her if it surprised her that the number of deaths in people who identify as LGBTQ alone from tobacco-related illnesses is currently at about 30,000 per year, more than double that of HIV/AIDS in all the population in the US. She said that she wasn’t surprised. That LGBTQ identifying people have huge and disproportionate rates of smoking and substance abuse. I asked in her opinion, why she thought might be. She answered, “Social stigma, family/social issues, perception of lack of care and resources, and often housing issues.”

Now the good stuff…First, I showed her the report from the Royal College of Physicians that concluded that vaping is at least 95% less harmful than combustible cigarettes. I asked her if she thought the same principles of harm reduction could be applied to smoking with less harmful alternatives such as vapor products, smokeless tobacco, SNUS, etc., and what that would mean for public health. This is her entire answer:

“I would have absolutely no problem talking to patients about switching to vaping if they want to quit smoking. I would like to be more educated about it, and what the barriers might be to someone looking to switch, for example, ease of use, cost, etc. When I was in school, the only options we had to give to people were patches, gum, and Wellbutrin. It is not my job, nor is it ethical to refuse people something based on my opinion or social ‘morals’. It is my job to help someone who asks to lead a healthier lifestyle if they choose. I have a feeling that the new generation of healthcare providers in schools right now may become better educated on the subject, just like every new generation becomes more educated on the topic of the time. Social change and change in medicine come gradually, with each new generation of providers. What I learned in school is radically different from what someone 20 years ago learned. I suspect it will always be evolving.”

Needless to say, I could not have been happier with the way the conversation went. I happen to work in healthcare, so these are easy conversations for me to have. But EVERYONE can talk to their neighbors, family, friends, etc. The more the opinions of society change, the more opinions in all areas, including healthcare will change. It takes time and patience, but it WILL happen. Change always does. Go have a conversation with a non-smoker.

Don’t ever give up.

Jennifer Berger-Coleman

CASAA Director of Community Outreach

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in All posts, community, e cigarettes, Harm Reduction, Jennifer Berger-Coleman, LGBTQ, News, Smokeless Tobacco, THR, Tool Box, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on 11.21.2017 – JBC: A harm reduction conversation with a Family Nurse Practitioner

MN – Plymouth, MN – Help stop a harmful tobacco 21 law!

The city of Plymouth is considering an ordinance that would limit adult access to low-risk tobacco and vapor products by raising the minimum legal purchase age from 18 to 21. A hearing will be held for this proposal on

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

7:00 PM

Council Chambers of City Hall

3400 Plymouth Boulevard

Plymouth, MN

In advance of the hearing, please take this opportunity to contact Plymouth city council members and urge them to reject this proposal.

Please make plans to attend this hearing. Even if you do not plan to speak, your presence is important as it demonstrates the large numbers of people affected by this issue. A group of advocates in Detroit Lakes organized a small but impressive attendance at a recent hearing in which a Tobacco 21 law was voted down. Making your presence known at a hearing has a remarkable impact.

Tobacco 21 laws are predicated on the notion that more prohibition is the solution. But we know from past and recent experiences with such policies that there are grave unintended consequences. Instead, the public would be better served through smoking prevention education and awareness about low-risk alternatives for those who choose to smoke.

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Originally posted in the CASAA Minnesota Action Center

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in All posts, Calls To Action, CTA, e cigarettes, Local Alert, Minnesota, MN-CTA-current, News, Plymouth, Smokeless Tobacco, Tobacco 21, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on MN – Plymouth, MN – Help stop a harmful tobacco 21 law!