Tobacco Industry- Cigarette Smoking News

Great tobacco events happen every day. Pay attention to everything that is new regarding smoking cigarettes, this way you have the power to take the right decisions. Interesting news tobacco markets.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Much More Must Be Done to Lower Smoking Rates

State inaction and tobacco industry tactics are slowing tobacco control efforts in the United States, a new report from the American Lung Association (ALA) finds.
According to the ALA report issued Wednesday, states spent $485.5 million on programs aimed at curbing tobacco use in 2013, a rise from $462.5 million in 2012. However, only two states – Alaska and North Dakota – had levels of funding on these programs that matched levels recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And 40 states and the District of Columbia failed to fund their tobacco prevention programs at even half of the CDC level. Lucky Strike Click&Roll
Many Americans also lack access to therapies that experts know can help smokers quit. Only two states provide Medicaid enrollees with coverage for all seven U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved anti-smoking medications and three forms of counseling, and only four states do so for state employees. On the other hand, the ALA said that tobacco companies are getting around current anti-smoking efforts by aggressively marketing other tobacco products, such as smokeless tobacco (chewing and dipping tobacco, snuff) and cigars. They are also aggressively promoting electronic cigarettes.
"There is no federal oversight of these products, and the e-cigarette industry is using celebrity spokespeople to glamorize its products, making unproven health claims, encouraging smokers to switch instead of quit, and creating candy- and fruit-flavored products to attract youth," the ALA said in the statement.

Rockford area reacts to possible smoking ban, limiting lighting up in cars

A proposed Illinois law smokes out people who might be putting kids at risk. If approved, legislation limits when you can light up on the road. We ask residents all over Rockford for their take on the possible ban.
The proposal would make it against the law to smoke if kids are in a car. It's not the first time the Illinois General Assembly's considered this restriction.
"My grandpa used to smoke in the car when I was young and I hated the smell, I would cover my nose." -says Rachel Berg, who supports the possible law.
That's not her only reasoning. Berg is also a mom.
"I have a two year-old and my husband smokes, but he's not allowed to smoke in the car with my daughter. I put my foot down on that."Parliament Silver Blue
Last year, legislation passed encouraging adults with kids in their cars to keep cigarettes in the pack. Supporters say this also keeps a child from second-hand smoke exposure in an enclosed space with low ventilation. But, this proposed law drives the health issue even further. If passed, it'll be illegal to smoke in a vehicle if a minor is there with you.
"The kids don't ask for the second-hand smoke they can't voice their own opinions, especially if they're really, really young." -Berg adds.
Everyone we asked supports this law and most of them are smokers, like Joshua Burmeister. He and many others thought the act already was illegal.
"Most parents in their right mind, I mean smoking in a car with your kids? Come on." -Burmeister says.
If this passes, drivers face a $100 fine for lighting up with children present. Illinois tried to pass a similar ban in 2007, but it failed in the House.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Madison County has one of the highest smoker rates in state and nation

Jack Kress, 52, took a long drag on his cigarette letting the smoke fill his lungs and curl around his face.
“They are just nasty,” Kress said. “I only smoke half a pack a day — I’m down to nothing.”
On Saturday, Kress, who lives in Anderson, was standing outside the Village Pantry, 112 E. 14th St., smoking his cigarettes — exactly 50 years after the U.S. Surgeon General said smoking causes illness and death.
Today, warnings are printed in large letters on advertisements and on every cigarette pack with the Surgeon General’s warning.
Warnings that could be written in a foreign language, as far as Kress is concerned.
“I can’t read or write,” Kress said looking down at the glowing end of his cigarette.
Kress said he wants to stop smoking, but said it has been difficult.
“I really think I could quit, but it helps with my nerves,” he said. “I hate smoking them. They take all your air — they are just bad.”
According to an annual report the state files with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 26 percent of the adult population are smokers. Nationwide, smoking among adults is between 9.3 percent and 26.5 percent. Indiana is ranked 50th among the states for its high population of smokers.
More than 30 percent of the adults in Madison County are smokers.
In the last month, 10 percent of the nation’s youth aged 12-17 smoked a cigarette. More than 11 percent of the youth in Indiana smoked a cigarette.
“What research shows is unlike alcohol and other drugs, tobacco actually trends with lower economic status,” Karesa Knight-Wilkerson, executive director and tobacco control coordinator for Intersect, 630 Nichol Ave. “People who lack a high school diploma or live in poverty have higher tobacco use rates.”
Knight-Wilkerson said survey information collected in Madison County shows monthly use of cigarettes in students is higher than both the state and national averages.
Nationally, only 4.9 percent students in the eighth grade use cigarettes. Across the state, 7 percent of eighth-grade students reported using cigarettes, and in Madison County, more than 9 percent admitted to smoking cigarettes.
More than 17 percent of students nationwide in the 12th grade report using cigarettes, 19.5 percent reported using cigarettes in the state, and 26.1 percent reported using cigarettes in Madison County.
Kress said he smoked his first cigarette when he was 12. Since then he has stopped smoking occasionally, but has not been able to break the habit. Cheap cigarettes.
According to the CDC, about 8 percent of smokers benefit from free tobacco cessation lines. Less than 1 percent called the quitline in Indiana. Madison County hospitals also offer tobacco cessation programs for free.
“We know it takes a tobacco user an average of seven to nine times to quit and stay quit for more than one year,” Knight-Wilkerson said. “The important thing is that they are recognizing the need to quit and are making that effort.”
Knight-Wilkerson said there are several tobacco cessation methods available to Madison County residents.
More than 443,000 people die each year from smoking or from exposure to secondhand smoke and more than 8.6 million people have a serious illness caused by smoking, according to the CDC.
When the Surgeon General’s warning was issued 50 years ago, almost half of the nation’s population smoked and no one thought twice about selling cigarettes to children.
“We grew up in a different time in the ’70s,” Kress said. “They used to sell cigarettes to me when I was a kid.”
James Davidson, 56, Anderson, said he has smoked for more than 30 years.
“I just had some tests and my lungs are a little foggy,” he said. “I wish I would have never touched them — period.”
But he is still smoking.

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Two Of The Best Reasons To Buy British American Tobacco plc Today

Investors in British American Tobacco have seen their shares and their dividend payouts double in value since August 2007, during which time the FTSE 100 has gained just 6%.
This kind of performance is impressive by any standards, but is especially good given that the tobacco industry is supposed to be in a long-term decline — so what’s going on?

The world’s most profitable industry?

One of the benefits of selling a mature product like cigarettes is that you don’t have to spend much money on R&D. Your customers are already addicted, and do not want or expect anything to change.
BAT owns several of the world’s biggest cigarette brands, and smokers in emerging markets will pay a premium for these brands, allowing BAT to take market share from local brands, without sacrificing pricing power — the holy grail of profitability.
During the first six months of this year, BAT’s operating margin rose to 37%, up from 35.3% last year. The firm targets a 0.5-1.0% increase in operating margin each year, and margin growth, coupled with share buybacks, have enabled BAT’s earnings per share to rise steadily, despite falling volumes.
Of course, the process of extracting more profit from fewer sales will reach a limit eventually, but BAT sold 694bn cigarettes last year, so I don’t think it’s anywhere near the limit yet.

A replacement for tobacco?

Electronic cigarettes — also known as vaporisers — have become increasingly popular in western markets over the last few years.
To be honest, I didn’t realise just how popular they had become until I saw a statistic in the Financial Times last week, suggesting that 10% of the UK’s 10m smokers now like to ‘vape’ — inhale nicotine vapour from an electronic cigarette.
BAT has been investing in electronic cigarettes for some time, and has recently launched its own product, Vype, into the UK market.
Vaping is no less addictive than smoking, and currently has none of the troublesome regulatory restrictions that apply to selling cigarettes and smoking. You can, for example, sit inside a pub and vape, quite legally.
I’ve got a feeling that this could become a very big market indeed.

BAT shares are still a buy

Despite their fantastic run over the last decade, I believe that British American Tobacco shares still have further to run, especially in terms of income growth.
I’m not alone, either. One of the most successful UK fund managers of the last two decades, Neil Woodford, has stayed loyal to the tobacco sector despite its outperformance.
Indeed, if you’d invested £10,000 into Mr Woodford’s High Income fund in 1988, it would have been worth £193,000 at the end of 2012 — a 1,830% increase!
British American Tobacco is one of Neil Woodford’s largest holdings. If you’d like access to an exclusive Fool report about Mr Woodford’s eight largest holdings, then I recommend you click here to download this free report, while it’s still available.

Monday, December 16, 2013

A very specific group of brain cells may be a target in nicotine withdrawal therapy

Nicotine withdrawal might take over your body, but it doesn't take over your brain. The symptoms of nicotine withdrawal are driven by a very specific group of neurons within a very specific brain region, according to a report in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication. Although caution is warranted, the researchers say, the findings in mice suggest that therapies directed at this group of neurons might one day help people quit smoking.Gauloises cigarettes.
"We were surprised to find that one population of neurons within a single brain region could actually control physical nicotine withdrawal behaviors," says Andrew Tapper of the Brudnick Neuropsychiatric Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.
Tapper and his colleagues first obtained mice addicted to nicotine by delivering the drug to mice in their water for a period of 6 weeks. Then they took the nicotine away. The mice started scratching and shaking in the way a dog does when it is wet. Close examination of the animals' brains revealed abnormally increased activity in neurons within a single region known as the interpeduncular nucleus.Esse cigarettes.
When the researchers artificially activated those neurons with light, animals showed behaviors that looked like nicotine withdrawal, whether they had been exposed to the drug or not. The reverse was also true: treatments that lowered activity in those neurons alleviated nicotine withdrawal symptoms.
That the interpeduncular nucleus might play such a role in withdrawal from nicotine makes sense because the region receives connections from other areas of the brain involved in nicotine use and response, as well as feelings of anxiety. The interpeduncular nucleus is also densely packed with nicotinic acetylcholine receptors that are the molecular targets of nicotine.
It is much less clear whether the findings related to nicotine will be relevant to other forms of addiction, but there are some hints that they may.
"Smoking is highly prevalent in people with other substance-use disorders, suggesting a potential interaction between nicotine and other drugs of abuse," Tapper says. "In addition, naturally occurring mutations in genes encoding the nicotinic receptor subunits that are found in the interpeduncular nucleus have been associated with drug and alcohol dependence."