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Do Tobacco Companies Have an Incentive to Promote "Harm Reduction" Products?: The Role of Competition.

David T LevyFrances ThirlwayDavid SweanorAlex C LiberLuz María Sanchez-RomeroRafael MezaClifford E DouglasK Michael Cummings
Published in: Nicotine & tobacco research : official journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco (2023)
Regulations that limit competition from independent firms while also protecting cigarette company profits risk slowing or even reversing recent declines in smoking, especially among youth and young adults. Regulations that reduce the appeal and addictiveness of combusted tobacco products, such as higher cigarette taxes or a reduced nicotine standard, will encourage smokers to quit and/or switch to less harmful non-combusted forms of tobacco. The regulation of non-combustible nicotine delivery products and cigarettes should be proportionate to their relative risks, so that smokers have incentives to switch from combustibles to safer alternatives, and cigarette companies have incentives to promote safer products.
Keyphrases
  • smoking cessation
  • young adults
  • replacement therapy
  • physical activity
  • hepatitis c virus