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How companies control where you see tobacco products and what policy can do about it

Packs of Pall Mall cigarettes manufactured by British American Tobacco Plc, sit in a display rack inside a news agents in London, U.K., on Friday, July 11, 2014. Reynolds American Inc., the producer of Camel cigarettes, said it's in talks to acquire Lorillard Inc. in a transaction that would create a closer competitor to U.S. tobacco market leader Altria Inc. Photographer: Simon Dawson/BloombergTobacco companies spent over $8.47 billion on marketing in retail establishments, also called point-of-sale marketing, in 2015 (the most recent figures available). This article is part of a series highlighting ways that states and localities are countering the deep pockets of the tobacco industry with policies regulating where and how tobacco products are sold.
There’s a reason why 93 percent of tobacco displays and 85 percent of tobacco shelving units are in the counter zone of retail establishments — in most stores, the cashier counter is the best place to encourage impulse purchases Find out more:
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Philly’s No. 1 killer isn’t guns or opioids – but it can be stopped

Recently, Philadelphia City Council held a hearing to shine a light on a particularly pernicious trick that tobacco companies use to entice people to smoke: infusing cigars and cigarettes with seductive “flavorings.” flavored-cigsSmoking is still Philadelphia’s number one killer, responsible by recent estimates for the deaths of more than 3,600 people a year. In part, that’s so high because about 22 percent of adults in Philly smoke, far more than the 15 percent of adults nationally, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As smoking rates have fallen over the years, the tobacco industry has come up with ever more inventive marketing tactics. Because nearly 90 percent of smokers start before age 18, those tactics mostly target kids. Learn more : ...
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Tobacco Nation: The deadly state of smoking disparity in the U.S.

Smoking in the U.S. has dramatically declined in the last two decades, particularly among the country’s youngest residents. In 2000, 23 percent of teens smoked cigarettes. By 2016, the number had fallen to just 6 percent. While there is much to celebrate in the reduction, the average national rate hides a significant variation found within the country. tobacco-nation-map2x-100 Find out more......
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