Ignoring puff counts: another shortcoming of the Federal Trade Commission cigarette testing programme

Objectives:To examine reasons behind the failure of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to preserve puff count information from standard cigarette testing and to elucidate the importance of puff count to overall tar yields.Methods:We reviewed industry documents on origins of the FTC test and datasets...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tobacco control 2008-09, Vol.17 (Suppl 1), p.i6-i9
Hauptverfasser: Kozlowski, L T, Whetzel, C A, Stellman, S D, O’Connor, R J
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objectives:To examine reasons behind the failure of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to preserve puff count information from standard cigarette testing and to elucidate the importance of puff count to overall tar yields.Methods:We reviewed industry documents on origins of the FTC test and datasets provided by the Tobacco Institute Testing Laboratory to the tobacco industry and FTC for reporting purposes.Results:The majority of the tobacco industry argued for “dual reporting” of tar yields—both per cigarette and per puff. Despite a request from the Tobacco Institute in 1967 that puff count information be preserved, documents and recent communications with the FTC indicate that puff number data have not been maintained by the government. In contrast, for the cigarette industry, puff count data are a fundamental and routine part of testing and important to cigarette design. A sample of puff counts for cigarettes tested in 1996 (n = 471) shows that on average 100 mm cigarettes have 18% more puffs taken on them than do 85 mm cigarettes in standard tests (7.66 vs 9.03; p
ISSN:0964-4563
1468-3318
DOI:10.1136/tc.2007.020602