Implications of the Tobacco Industry Documents for Public Health and Policy
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Public Health
- Vol. 24 (1), 267-288
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.publhealth.24.100901.140813
Abstract
▪ Abstract The release of previously secret internal tobacco industry documents has given the public health community unprecedented insight into the industry's motives, strategies, tactics, and data. The documents provide information that is not available from any other source and describe the history of industry activities over the past 50 years. The documents show that the tobacco industry has been engaged in deceiving policy makers and the public for decades. This paper begins with a brief history of the tobacco industry documents and describes the methodological challenges related to locating and analyzing an enormous number of poorly indexed documents. It provides an overview of selected important findings of document research conducted to date, including analyses of industry documents on nicotine and addiction, product design, marketing and promotion, passive smoke, and internal activities. The paper concludes with a discussion of the implications of tobacco document research for public health and the application of such research to fields other than tobacco control.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mongoven, Biscoe & Duchin: destroying tobacco control activism from the insideTobacco Control, 2002
- Tobacco industry documents: comparing the Minnesota Depository and internet accessTobacco Control, 2002
- Marketing to America's youth: evidence from corporate documentsTobacco Control, 2002
- Tax, price and cigarette smoking: evidence from the tobacco documents and implications for tobacco company marketing strategies: Figure 1Tobacco Control, 2002
- Whose standard is it, anyway? How the tobacco industry determines the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) standards for tobacco and tobacco productsTobacco Control, 2001
- How cigarette additives are used to mask environmental tobacco smokeTobacco Control, 2000
- Tobacco industry memo reveals passive smoking strategyBMJ, 1997
- Industry-Funded Research and Conflict of Interest: An Analysis of Research Sponsored by the Tobacco Industry Through the Center for Indoor Air ResearchJournal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 1996
- Environmental tobacco smoke. The Brown and Williamson documentsPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1995
- Lawyer control of the tobacco industry's external research program. The Brown and Williamson documentsPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1995