FDA moves to slash nicotine in cigarettes
Source: NBC News
Jan. 15, 2025, 1:42 PM EST
Nicotine levels in cigarettes sold in the U.S. would have to be drastically lowered under a proposal released Wednesday by the Food and Drug Administration. If finalized, the change would mean that cigarettes would lose their ability to hook most people into addiction.
By reducing the nicotine level of cigarettes and certain other combusted tobacco products to a level low enough to no longer create or sustain addiction, the cycle of exposure to these toxic chemicals can be broken, Brian King, director of the FDAs Center for Tobacco Products, said during a briefing with reporters.
Smoking kills more than 480,000 Americans each year. Levels of nicotine in cigarettes vary widely depending on the brand but usually average 13 milligrams a cigarette. The FDAs plan would limit nicotine in nearly all combustible tobacco products a category that includes cigarettes, most cigars and pipe tobacco to 0.07 milligrams. Thats about a 95% reduction.
Although the proposal was released at the 11th hour by the outgoing Biden administration, officials during President-elect Donald Trump's first term raised the possibility of a federal regulatory plan for nicotine. So its possible that the change could move forward in the next four years.
Read more: https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/nicotine-cigarettes-fda-moves-to-cut-rcna187607
Link to FDA NEWS RELEASE - FDA Proposes Significant Step Toward Reducing Nicotine to Minimally or Nonaddictive Level in Cigarettes and Certain Other Combusted Tobacco Products
Dave Bowman
(4,082 posts)Ponietz
(3,327 posts)PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,942 posts)But essentially isn't smoking all about the nicotine addiction? Or is it merely the inhaling and exhaling of smoke?
I had always thought nicotine was huge, the reason in the end that people smoked. With almost no nicotine in cigarettes, will people simply start smoking a whole lot more just to get the nicotine? Or will they smoke more or less the same amount as before?
Igel
(36,370 posts)Hence vaping and nicotine cheek pouches.
Can ban the stuff outright, find a regulatory way to accomplish the same thing through the back door. And, of course, the additional processing is likely to increase prices.
(No, I've never smoked, never tried. Harassed my parents as a teen enough to get my father to quit; my mother ... Inveterate smoker for decades but she had a pre-determined maximum price limit and when she went to restock and that limit had been reached, she stopped cold turkey and never went back.)
Of course, there will be carve outs for religious or ceremonial or cultural reasons. And probably not enforceable at all on reservations. So a sieve.
Dave Bowman
(4,082 posts)Like most black markets, organized crime will be in charge and they'll be distributing a highly addictive substance. What could go wrong?
LittleGirl
(8,510 posts)I've been addicted for decades. I just quit again last week. It was impossible to find non-nicotine smokes.
BadgerKid
(4,712 posts)Smoking still ups the odds for cancer, COPD, and probably other diseases.
The elderly in my life have ended up quitting due to either unrelated hospitalizations (ie forced quitting) or to COPD and being attached to oxygen machine.
My advice is dont start smoking in the first place.
airplaneman
(1,292 posts)Nicotine gum and patches available
-Airplane