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The past, present and future of nicotine addiction

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    I'm going to tell you a story.
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    I'm going to tell you a story
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    about how the deadliest
    consumer product imaginable
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    came to be.
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    It's the cigarette.
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    The cigarette is the only consumer product
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    that, when used as intended,
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    will kill half of all long-term users
    prematurely, later in life.
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    But this is also a story
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    about the work that we're doing
    at the Food and Drug Administration,
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    and specifically,
    the work that we're doing
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    to create the cigarette of the future,
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    that is no longer capable
    of creating or sustaining addiction.
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    A lot of people think that
    the tobacco problem or the smoking problem
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    has been solved in the United States
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    because of the great progress
    that's been made
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    over the last 40, 50 years,
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    when it comes to both
    consumption and prevalence.
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    And it's true;
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    smoking rates are at historic lows.
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    It's true for both adults and for kids.
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    And it's true that those
    who continue to smoke
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    are smoking far fewer cigarettes per day
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    than at any time in history.
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    But what if I told you
    that tobacco use,
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    primarily because of firsthand
    and secondhand exposure
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    to the smoke in cigarettes,
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    remains the leading cause of completely
    preventable disease and death
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    in this country?
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    Well, that's true.
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    And what if I told you
    that it's actually killing more people
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    than we thought
    to be the case ever before?
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    That's true, too.
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    Smoking kills more people each year
    than alcohol, AIDS, car accidents,
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    illegal drugs, murders
    and suicides combined.
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    Year in and year out.
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    In 2014,
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    Dr. Adams's predecessor released
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    the 50th anniversary
    Surgeon General's report
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    on smoking and health.
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    And that report upped the annual
    death toll from smoking,
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    because the list
    of smoking-related illnesses
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    got bigger.
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    And so it is now conservatively estimated
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    that smoking kills
    480,000 Americans every year.
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    These are completely preventable deaths.
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    How do we wrap our heads around
    a statistic like this?
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    So much of what we've heard
    at this conference
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    is about individual experiences
    and personal experiences.
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    How do we deal with this
    at a population level,
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    when there are 480,000 moms,
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    dads, sisters, brothers, aunts and uncles
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    dying unnecessary deaths
    every year from tobacco?
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    And then what happens
    when you think about this trajectory
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    for the future?
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    And just do the simple math:
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    from the time of the 50th anniversary
    Surgeon General's report five years ago,
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    when this horrible statistic was raised,
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    just through mid-century --
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    that's more than 17 million
    avoidable deaths in the United States
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    from tobacco use,
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    primarily because of cigarettes.
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    The Surgeon General concluded
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    that 5.6 million children
    alive in the United States in 2014
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    will die prematurely later in life
    because of cigarettes.
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    Five point six million children.
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    So this is an enormous
    public health problem for all of us,
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    but especially for us as regulators
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    at the Food and Drug Administration
    and the Center for Tobacco Products.
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    What can we do about it?
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    What can we do to reverse this trajectory
    of disease and death?
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    Well, we have an interesting guide
    to help unravel issues
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    like: How did the cigarette
    as we know it come to be?
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    What is the true nature
    of the tobacco and cigarette business?
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    How did the industry behave
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    in the historically
    unregulated marketplace?
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    And our guide
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    is previously secret internal documents
    from the tobacco industry.
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    Come with me
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    in a tobacco industry
    document time machine.
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    Nineteen sixty-three
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    was 25 years before the Surgeon General
    was finally able to conclude
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    that the nicotine
    and cigarettes was addictive.
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    That did not happen until
    the Surgeon General's report in 1998.
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    Nineteen sixty-three
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    was one year before the first-ever
    Surgeon General's report in 1964.
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    I remember 1964.
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    I don't remember
    the Surgeon General's report,
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    but I remember 1964.
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    I was a kid growing up
    in Brooklyn, New York.
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    This was at a time
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    when almost one in two adults
    in the United States smoked.
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    Both of my parents
    were heavy smokers at the time.
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    Tobacco use was so incredibly normalized
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    that -- and this wasn't North Carolina,
    Virginia or Kentucky,
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    this was Brooklyn --
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    we made ashtrays for our parents
    in arts and crafts class.
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    (Laughter)
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    The ashtrays I made were pretty awful,
    but they were ashtrays.
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    (Laughter)
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    So normalized that I remember seeing
    a bowl of loose cigarettes in the foyer
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    of our house and other houses
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    as a welcoming gesture
    when friends came over for a visit.
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    OK, we're back in 1963.
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    The top lawyer for Brown and Williamson,
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    which was then the third-largest
    cigarette company in the United Sates,
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    wrote the following:
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    "Nicotine is addictive.
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    We are, then, in the business
    of selling nicotine -- an addictive drug."
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    It's a remarkable statement,
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    as much for what it doesn't say
    as for what it does say.
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    He didn't say they were
    in the cigarette business.
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    He didn't say they were
    in the tobacco business.
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    He said they were in the business
    of selling nicotine.
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    Philip Morris in 1972:
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    "The cigarette isn't a product,
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    it's a package.
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    The product is nicotine.
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    The pack is a storage container
    for a day's supply of nicotine.
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    The cigarette, a dispenser
    for a dose unit of nicotine."
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    We'll come back to this
    dose unit notion later.
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    And R.J. Reynolds in 1972:
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    "In a sense, the tobacco industry
    may be thought of as being a specialized,
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    highly ritualized and stylized segment
    of the pharmaceutical industry.
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    Tobacco products uniquely
    contain and deliver nicotine,
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    a potent drug with a variety
    of physiological effects."
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    At the time, and for many
    decades, publicly,
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    the industry completely denied addiction
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    and completely denied causality.
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    But they knew the true nature
    of their business.
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    And from time to time,
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    there have been health scares
    made public about cigarettes,
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    going back many decades.
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    How did the industry respond?
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    And how did they respond
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    in this historically
    unregulated marketplace?
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    Going back to the 1930s,
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    it was with advertising
    that heavily featured imagery of doctors
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    and other health care professionals
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    sending messages of reassurance.
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    This is an ad for Lucky Strikes,
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    a popular cigarette
    of the time in the '30s:
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    [20,679 physicians
    say "Luckies are less irritating."
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    Your throat protection
    against irritation, against cough.]
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    (Laughter)
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    We laugh,
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    but this was the kind of advertising
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    that was there to send
    a health message of reassurance.
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    Fast-forward to 1950s, '60s and '70s.
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    And here, again,
    in the absence of regulation,
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    what we're going to see
    is modifications to the product
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    and product design
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    to respond to the health
    concerns of the day.
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    This is the Kent Micronite filter.
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    And here, the innovation, if you will,
    was the filtered cigarette.
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    [Full smoking pleasure ...
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    plus proof of the greatest
    health protection ever.]
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    What the smoker
    of this product didn't know,
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    what their doctor didn't know,
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    what the government didn't know,
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    is that this was a filter
    that was lined with asbestos --
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    (Laughter/Murmurs/Delete?)
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    so that when smokers
    were smoking this filtered cigarette
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    and still inhaling the chemicals in smoke
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    that we know are associated
    with cancer and lung disease
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    and heart disease,
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    they were also sucking down
    asbestos fibers.
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    In the 1960s and the 1970s,
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    the so-called innovation
    was the light cigarette.
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    This is a typical brand
    of the day called True.
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    And this is after the Surgeon General's
    reports have started coming out.
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    And you see the look
    of concern on her face.
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    [Considering all I'd heard,
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    I decided to either quit
    or smoke True.
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    I smoke True.]
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    (Laughter)
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    [The low tar, low nicotine cigarette.]
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    And then it says, "Think about it."
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    And then even below that
    in the small print
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    are tar numbers and nicotine numbers.
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    What was a light cigarette?
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    How did it work?
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    This is an illustration
    of the product modification
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    known as "filter ventilation."
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    That's not a real filter blown up.
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    That's just a picture
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    so that you could see the rows
    of laser-perforated ventilation holes
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    that were put on the filter.
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    When you look at a real cigarette,
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    it's harder to see.
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    Every patent for this product shows
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    that the ventilation holes
    should be 12 millimeters
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    from the lip end of the filter.
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    How did it work?
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    The cigarette got stuck into a machine.
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    The machine started
    puffing away on the cigarette
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    and recording tar and nicotine levels.
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    As the machine smoked,
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    outside air came through
    those ventilation holes
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    and diluted the amount of smoke
    that was coming through the cigarette.
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    So as the machine smoked,
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    there really was less tar
    and nicotine being delivered
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    compared to a regular cigarette.
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    What the tobacco industry knew
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    was that human beings
    don't smoke like machines.
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    How do human beings smoke this?
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    Where do the fingers go?
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    (Murmurs)
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    Where do the lips go?
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    I told you that the patent said
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    that the holes are 12 millimeters
    from the lip end.
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    The smoker didn't even know
    they were there,
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    but between fingers and lips,
    the holes get blocked.
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    And when the holes get blocked,
    it's no longer a light cigarette.
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    Turns out that there's actually
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    basically as much nicotine
    inside a light cigarette
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    as a regular cigarette.
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    The difference was what's on the outside.
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    But once you block what's on the outside,
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    it's a regular cigarette.
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    Congress put FDA in the business
    of regulating tobacco products
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    10 years ago this June.
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    So you heard the statistics
    at the beginning
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    about the extraordinary contribution
    to disease and death that cigarettes make.
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    We've also been paying a lot of attention
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    to how the cigarette works
    as a drug-delivery device
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    and the remarkable efficiency
    with which it delivers nicotine.
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    So let's take a look.
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    When the smoker puffs on the cigarette,
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    the nicotine from that puff
    gets up into the brain
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    in less than 10 seconds.
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    Less than 10 seconds.
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    Up in the brain,
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    there are these things
    called "nicotinic receptors."
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    They're there ...
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    waiting.
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    They're waiting for, in the words
    of that Philip Morris document,
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    the next "dose unit of nicotine."
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    The smoker that you see outside,
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    huddled with other smokers,
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    in the cold,
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    in the wind,
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    in the rain,
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    is experiencing craving
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    and may be experiencing
    the symptoms of withdrawal.
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    Those symptoms of withdrawal
    are a chemical message
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    that these receptors
    are sending to the body,
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    saying, "Feed me!"
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    And a product that can deliver the drug
    in less than 10 seconds
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    turns out to be an incredibly efficient
    and incredibly addictive product.
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    We've spoken to so many
    addiction treatment experts
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    over the years.
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    And the story I hear is the same
    over and over again:
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    "Long after I was able
    to get somebody off of heroin
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    or cocaine or crack cocaine,
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    I can't get them to quit cigarettes."
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    A large part of the explanation
    is the 10-second thing.
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    FDA has it within its regulatory reach
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    to use the tools of product regulation
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    to render cigarettes as we know them
    minimally or nonaddictive.
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    We're working on this.
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    And this could have a profound
    impact at a population level
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    from this one policy.
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    We did dynamic population-level
    modeling a year ago,
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    and we published the results
    in "The New England Journal."
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    And because of the generational
    effect of this policy,
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    which I'll explain in a minute,
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    here's what we project out
    through the end of the century:
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    more than 33 million people
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    who would otherwise have gone on
    to become regular smokers won't,
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    because the cigarette
    that they'll be experimenting with
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    can't create or sustain addiction.
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    This would drive the adult smoking rate
    down to less than one and a half percent.
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    And these two things combined
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    would result in the saving of more than
    eight million cigarette-related deaths
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    that would otherwise have occurred
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    from the generational impact of this.
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    Now, why am I saying "generational"?
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    It's about kids.
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    Ninety percent of adult smokers
    started smoking when they were kids.
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    Half of them became regular smokers
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    before they were legally old enough
    to buy a pack of cigarettes.
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    Half of them became regular smokers
    before they were 18 years old.
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    Experimentation.
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    Regular smoking.
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    Addiction.
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    Decades of smoking.
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    And then the illness,
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    and that's why we're talking
    about a product
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    that will kill half of all long-term users
    prematurely later in life.
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    The generational impact
    of this nicotine-reduction policy
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    is profound.
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    Those old industry documents
    had a word for young people.
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    They were described as
    "the replacement smokers."
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    The replacement smokers
    for addicted adult smokers
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    who died or quit.
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    Future generations of kids,
    especially teens,
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    are going to engage in risky behavior.
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    We can't stop that.
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    But what if the only cigarette
    that they could get their hands on
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    could no longer create
    or sustain addiction?
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    That's the public health
    return on investment
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    at a population level over time.
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    Haven't said anything about e-cigarettes.
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    But I have to say something
    about e-cigarettes.
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    (Laughter)
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    We are dealing with an epidemic
    of kids' use of e-cigarettes.
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    And what troubles us the most
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    in combination with the rising numbers
    when it comes to prevalence,
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    is frequency.
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    Not only are more kids using e-cigarettes,
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    but more kids are using e-cigarettes
    20 or more days in the past 30 days
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    than at any time since e-cigarettes
    came onto the market.
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    And at FDA, we're doing
    everything that we can
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    using program and policy,
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    first to get the word out to kids
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    that this is not a harmless product
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    and to make sure that kids
    aren't initiating and experimenting
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    on any tobacco product,
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    whether combustion is present or not.
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    But think about e-cigarettes
    in a properly regulated marketplace
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    as something that could be of benefit
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    to addicted adult cigarette smokers
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    who are trying to transition
    away from cigarettes.
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    So, I'll leave you with this vision:
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    imagine a world
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    where the only cigarette
    that future generations of kids
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    could experiment with
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    could no longer create
    or sustain addiction,
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    because of a single policy.
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    Imagine a world
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    where health-concerned cigarette smokers,
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    especially if a policy goes into effect
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    that takes the nicotine levels down
    to minimally or nonaddictive levels,
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    could transition to alternative
    and less harmful forms
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    of nicotine delivery,
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    starting with FDA-approved
    nicotine medications,
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    like the gum, patch and lozenge.
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    And finally,
  • 16:22 - 16:25
    imagine a world and a properly
    regulated marketplace,
  • 16:25 - 16:28
    whether it's e-cigarettes
    or whatever the technology of the day,
  • 16:28 - 16:30
    it's not the product developers
    and the marketers
  • 16:30 - 16:32
    who decide which products come to market
  • 16:32 - 16:34
    and what claims get made for them,
  • 16:34 - 16:37
    it's review scientists at FDA,
  • 16:37 - 16:39
    who look at applications
  • 16:39 - 16:42
    and decide, using the standard
    that Congress has entrusted us
  • 16:42 - 16:44
    to implement and enforce,
  • 16:44 - 16:47
    whether a particular product
    should come to market
  • 16:47 - 16:51
    because the marketing of that product
    and the words of our law
  • 16:51 - 16:54
    would be appropriate for the protection
    of the public health.
  • 16:54 - 16:57
    These are the kinds
    of powerful regulatory tools
  • 16:57 - 17:00
    that are within our reach
  • 17:00 - 17:01
    to deal with what remains
  • 17:01 - 17:04
    the leading cause of completely
    preventable disease and death
  • 17:04 - 17:05
    in the country.
  • 17:05 - 17:07
    If we get this right,
  • 17:08 - 17:12
    that trajectory,
    those 5.6 million kids,
  • 17:12 - 17:14
    is breakable.
  • 17:14 - 17:15
    Thank you.
  • 17:15 - 17:18
    (Applause)
Title:
The past, present and future of nicotine addiction
Speaker:
Mitch Zeller
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
17:30

English subtitles

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