The package as a weapon of influence: Changes to cigarette packaging design as a function of regulatory changes in Canada

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Abstract

introduction Given existing regulations that ban the tobacco industry from engaging in traditional forms of advertising and require warning labels on cigarette packaging, we suggest that one response on the part of tobacco manufacturers has been to make alterations to design elements of cigarette packages themselves. The current research seeks to examine how cigarette manufacturers have altered elements of cigarette packaging in response to regulatory changes by the Government of Canada in 2011, which increased health warning sizes on cigarette packages from 50% of the principal display surface to 75%. methods Cigarette packages (n=1689) that had been on the market in Canada in the period 2001–2017 were examined and coded for package design elements including package innovation (size and package style), color (hue and saturation), and branding elements (use of iconography and variant names). Characteristics of pre-regulation packaging were then systematically compared to characteristics of post-regulation packaging. results Many of these packaging design elements, including package size and package style, primary and secondary hue, color saturation, use of variant label names, and use of iconography have systematically varied in response to regulatory changes in Canada. For example, we observed increases in the use of flip-top (vs slide and shell) packaging, the use of yellow, black and white as the focal color, incidence of color-themed variant names, and the use of female and crest-related logos. conclusions The evidence suggests that many packaging design elements have varied systematically along with regulatory changes in Canada.

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APA

Wade, W. S., & White, K. (2020). The package as a weapon of influence: Changes to cigarette packaging design as a function of regulatory changes in Canada. Tobacco Prevention and Cessation, 6(March), 1–4. https://doi.org/10.18332/tpc/116744

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