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Bliley TI

[Memo Concerning Legal Advice and the Industry's Position On Addiction]

Date: 26 Nov 1984
Length: 2 pages
54213-54214
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bliley_ti 00000302-00000303

Abstract

Memo from William Kloepfer to Samuel Chilcote regarding legal advice and the industry's "Position On Addiction." Includes conventional wisdom on nicotine addiction. States arguments to counter what is traditionally said and thought about nicotine's addictive properties. Directs the industry not to make comments on nicotine and addiction to protect against product liability suits.

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(indexer.indexer_email WAS INVALID IN OLD DATABASE: JL)

Company
TI
Named Organization
American Psychiatric Association
National Institute on Drug Abuse (An addiction research center in Baltimore, MD)
An addiction research center located in Baltimore, MD
World Health Organization (Concerned with global public health)
International organization concered with public health worldwide
Type
MEMO
Author
Kloepfer, William J., Jr. (TI Public Affairs VP, c. 1988)
Senior Vice President of Public Affairs Relations for the Tobacco Institute
Copied
Cullman, H.
Recipient
Chilcote, Samuel D., Jr. (TI President (1981-1997))
Chilcote has knowledge of The Tobacco Institute's and the tobacco industry's participation in public fraud and disinformation relative to health hazards of tobacco use, in the manipulation of nicotine in tobacco products and in marketing of tobacco products to children.
Named Person
Sirridge, Patrick M. (Attorney, Shook, Hardy and Bacon)
Subject
addiction
industry response
Lawsuits
nicotine
product liability

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Page 1: 00000302 Log in for more options!
Telecopy to: Hugh Cullman From: Sam Chilcote For your information, as we discussed on the phone. Total pages: 2 pages November 26, 1984 ~0 "- et ~t8 ~0.: ~ /. 199 T0: S~L D. CHILCOTE, JR. C1,~ ~0~ ~ FROM: WILLI~ ~OEPFER, JR. SUBJECT: POSITION ON ~DICTION This is reconstructed from personal notes I made several months ago when, at our request, Pat Sirridge of Shook, Hardy & Bacon briefed the public relations division staff on what's being said, and what we might say, on the matter of cigarette addiction. What's being said o People smoke to get nicotine o Nicotine is psychoactive -- it influences behavior o Nicotine releases certain hormones or "opiates" which produce pleasure and relaxation o Stopping smoking produces withdrawal symptoms o People who wish to quit smoking often can't, or the recidivision rate is high o Such conclusions as those above have been reached by NIDA, WHO-and the American Psychiatric Association o Smokers compensate for low-yield cigarettes by smoking more o Smoking is a "gateway" to other drug use o Prescribed nicotine gum is an antidote It can also be argued -- o Smoking is different things in terms of time, place, etc. for different people -- that complexity doesn't fit addiction TIMN 0054213
Page 2: 00000303 Log in for more options!
CED Samuel D. Chilcote, Jr . "~4~..~_~t~e C~..~[~)~_. November 26, 1984 ~_ -~ur~. e~,-"~rs A4~?'*~a o The te~ addiction is heine used casually and its real meanin~ is bein~ lost; smokin~ should be called a custom or habit o Addiction should be defined accurately, not carelessly o Some s~toms of "withdrawal" can be associated ~th all sorts of inErained behavior or habits o Nicotine is not intoxlcatlnE -- it produces no "high" o People c~'t quit? More than 33 million have in this co.try -- 95 percent of them on their o~ without help -- and that is not characteristic of addiction o ~ere's no consensus in the literature that nicotine is addictive o At about the sa~ the ~erican Psychiatric Association labeled smokin~ as addictive, i~ dropped ho~se~allty as a disorder -- their disorder man~l seems more political than scientific -- and in it, tobacco does not fit their o~ definition of physical substance abuse o Coffee dri~inE is similar ~o smokinE o Re~ardinE recidivism, the majority of foyer s~kers who remain nonsmokers have not been studied scientifically -- is there somethin~ special about the recidivists that science should know? o If nicotine is a dru~, why are there different quit rates ~on~ different social strata? o If s~kers are pers~ded through propaganda that they are addicted, it ~ives them an excuse not to quit Use of this material Co~sel has advised us to make no co~ents on our o~ initiative on this subject so lonE as it is a basis for product liability suits aEainst Institute members. This advice is in keepinE with nodal advice to defendan~ clients and their a~ents and is not especially significant reEardin8 just this one subject. ~e "It can also be arEued" points above are provided in case of an inquiry which must be answered. ~SS ~

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