A White House office deleted language in a
recently introduced tobacco regulation that would have removed flavored
e-cigarettes from the market until they had been authorized by the Food
and Drug Administration, an edited version of the document shows.
On May 5, the FDA released a final rule extending its tobacco authority
to include e-cigarettes, pipe tobacco, cigars and hookah. The rule
becomes effective in early August. Under the rule, companies must seek
marketing authorization for any tobacco product introduced after Feb.
15, 2007.
A smoker puffs on an e-cigarette. Torin Halsey / Wichita Falls Times Record News
The rule gives manufacturers a grace period of
up to two years to submit marketing applications, during which they can
continue to sell their products. They can sell them for an additional
year while the FDA completes its review.
As submitted by the FDA to the White House
Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the rule gave a grace period for
flavored products of only 90 days after the rule became effective. Related:Here's What You Need To Know About the New Tobacco Rule
Public health advocates have long called for
flavored tobacco products to be banned, saying flavors such as bazooka
Joe Bubble Gum and Cotton Candy are designed to appeal to children.
The FDA provided pages of data and scientific
studies in support of its plan, noting "a dramatic rise in youth and
young adult use of typically flavored tobacco products, like
e-cigarettes and waterpipe tobacco, and continued youth and young adult
use of cigars."
The OMB deleted both the FDA's planned policy and the rationale for the policy.
A White House spokeswoman, Emily Cain, said the
OMB "does not comment on changes made during the interagency review
process." The FDA also does not comment, FDA spokesman Michael
Felberbaum said.
In its originally submitted rule, the FDA said
it recognized that numerous flavored products would come off the market
within 180 days of the rule's publication "and that this will
significantly impact the availability of flavored tobacco products at
least in the short term."
But it said the move was important because
tobacco products with characterizing flavors, including menthol but
excluding tobacco flavor, were attractive to young people. Related:E-Cigarettes Deliver Harmful Chemicals
"FDA made an overwhelming scientific case to
OMB," Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids,
said in an interview. "For reasons that are not articulated, those
people substituted their own judgment."
"We are deeply troubled that these important
safeguards were stripped in this way when FDA repeatedly demonstrated
that the science shows flavored products appeal to youth and young
adults," Harold Wimmer, president of the American Lung Association, said
in a statement.
Proponents of e-cigarettes say the products can
help people quit smoking and that flavors are a crucial element of what
makes them attractive to adults seeking to quit. The FDA said in its
original rule that evidence supporting such claims "is thus far largely
anecdotal."
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