15 NE kids a day start smoking
FRESH and former smoker and cancer survivor Sue Mountain have welcomed the ban on child-friendly menthol cigarettes from 20th May. It comes as new figures show over 5,400 children in the North East, or 15 a day, start smoking.
Menthol is often a “starter product” for children as the sweetness makes it easier to smoke and to inhale deep into the lungs. Menthol smokers are also more likely to become heavily addicted and find it harder to quit, and Sue says she believes the myths around menthol will have cost many smokers their lives.
Ailsa Rutter OBE, Director of Fresh, said: “Anything we can do to turn off the tap of children starting to smoke is welcome. None of us want to think of our children becoming in the future the next generation of people with smoking-related diseases.
“While it is brilliant to see youth smoking rates have declined, it is sobering to think that 15 North East children a day and over 5,400 a year take up smoking – that’s about the same number as smokers who will die from tobacco-related diseases.
“Tobacco companies used to talk of “replacement smokers” and it is clear they continue to profit from a flow of new smokers to fill that gap of people who die or quit.”
She added: “For young people experimenting with smoking, menthol can make it easier to start smoking and tolerate the harshness of tobacco smoke. It can act as a gateway. There is also some evidence that menthol may be more addictive.
“The reality is that all tobacco will kill one in two of its long-term users. With menthol flavours now being removed from cigarettes, we also hope that some smokers will decide that now is the time to quit altogether. And with smoking worsening complications from coronavirus, there has never been a better time for smokers to quit.”
Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) has also welcomed the introduction of the ban on child-friendly menthol cigarettes on 20th May as a decisive next step towards ending the tobacco epidemic.[1] The increasingly tough twenty first century tobacco regulations introduced by successive governments have been associated with a rapid decline in youth smoking from 17% of under 16s in 2002 to 5% in 2018.
Deborah Arnott, Chief Executive of Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) said: “Menthol cigarettes are a child-friendly starter product because menthol makes it easier to smoke and to inhale the smoke deep into the lungs. Menthol smokers are also more likely to become heavily addicted and find it harder to quit. That’s why the Government concluded a ban on menthol was justified [1], it’s just a shame it’s taken so long. The ban on menthol is long overdue, all other cigarette flavourings became illegal three years ago.”
Despite the long-term decline in child smoking, in England an estimated 280 children under 16 will start smoking today [2] highlighting why the menthol ban is needed.
More than two thirds [3] of the 280 children across England who start smoking today will turn into regular smokers, risking a lifetime of addiction and years of disease before a premature death. Every year nearly 80,000 people die from smoking in England,[4] and smoking is responsible for half the difference in life expectancy between the richest and the poorest.[5] The ban on menthol will help bring to an end this public health disaster.”
Ex-smoker Sue Mountain, from South Tyneside, used to smoke menthol cigarettes. She underwent laser treatment in 2012 after a biopsy revealed she had laryngeal cancer. The cancer returned in 2017 which required radiotherapy every day for four weeks.
Sue said: “I went onto menthol cigarettes many years ago when I had my first child. I found it very difficult to stop smoking, and I thought that this was a safer choice. It had to be, it was menthol and menthol is used for medicinal purposes?
“I’m so pleased the UK government are introducing the menthol ban because of menthol being associated with medicine and that it does the body good. I believe these types of products were giving the message that they were less harmful just by having menthol associated with them. I believe many smokers will have died or have suffered from smoking related diseases because they wrongly believed menthol was a healthier choice.”
All other characterising flavours in cigarettes have been banned from sale since May 2017, but after intense tobacco industry lobbying the implementation date for menthol was delayed by three years. Analysis of industry data by the Tobacco Control Research Group at the University of Bath show that during this time the tobacco industry continued to promote menthol cigarettes and the UK market share of menthol cigarettes grew rapidly from 14% of cigarette sales in 2014 to over a fifth (21%) in 2018. [6]
Tobacco manufacturers have also developed products to circumvent the ban. These include menthol flavoured filters which can be used with roll your own tobacco; and cards which can be inserted into cigarette packs and roll your own pouches to flavour the tobacco; and menthol flavoured cigarillos which are not included in the ban.[6]
Independent newsagent John McClurey from Gateshead said: “I’m glad tobacco sales continue to fall and I look forward to the Government achieving its ambition for England to be smokefree by 2030. I’d much rather sell birthday cards for people who are living longer than sympathy cards for people who have died as a result of their smoking.
“I don’t understand why the Government is allowing the sale of menthol flavoured cigarillos, which look like cigarettes and smoke like cigarettes, the only difference being they’re wrapped in tobacco leaf. Whether they’re cigarettes or cigarillos the menthol flavour makes them easier to inhale for young people starting to smoke, and worse still because they’re cigarillos they can be sold in smaller, ten packs, making them cheaper to buy and more accessible to young people, going against everything I believe in.”
[1] For a detailed analysis of the legislation and the evidence behind it see the ASH media Advisory. See
https://ash.org.uk/media-and-news/press-releases-media-and-news/advisorymentholban2020/
[2] Methodology: Calculated by the Cancer Intelligence Team at Cancer Research UK, December 2019, using
Smoking, Drinking and Drug Use in Young People in England 2016 and 2018 data Figures represent the average number of children per year between 2016 and 2018. Percentage of new smokers was calculated for each single-year age band, and ‘smoker’ was defined as ‘regular’, ‘occasional’ or ‘used to smoke’. For example, percentage of new smokers aged 13 in 2018, was calculated by subtracting the percentage of smokers aged 12 in 2017, from the percentage of smokers aged 13 in 2018. This calculation was used for ages 12, 13, 14 and 15; for age 11 all smokers were considered new smokers. 2017 figures were estimated as the average of 2016 and 2018, as no 2017 survey was carried out. Percentage of new smokers in England was applied to UK population estimates to obtain the number of new UK smokers. The 2014-18 trend in estimated number of new child smokers in the UK each year was projected forward to obtain estimates for 2019-21. Yearly figures were divided by 365 to obtain daily figures.
[3] Birge M, Duffy S, Miler JA, Hajek P. What proportion of people who try one cigarette become daily smokers? A meta-analysis of representative surveys. Nicotine Tob Res. 2018 Nov 15;20(12):1427-1433. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntx243
[4] NHS Digital.
Statistics on Smoking, England – 2019. July 2019.
[5] Fair Society, Healthier Lives. Marmot review University College London, 2010
[7] Hiscock R, Silver K, Zatonski M, Gilmore AB. Tob Control 2020;0:1–5. doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2020-055769