2008
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0050251
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“Efforts to Reprioritise the Agenda” in China: British American Tobacco's Efforts to Influence Public Policy on Secondhand Smoke in China

Abstract: BackgroundEach year, 540 million Chinese are exposed to secondhand smoke (SHS), resulting in more than 100,000 deaths. Smoke-free policies have been demonstrated to decrease overall cigarette consumption, encourage smokers to quit, and protect the health of nonsmokers. However, restrictions on smoking in China remain limited and ineffective. Internal tobacco industry documents show that transnational tobacco companies (TTCs) have pursued a multifaceted strategy for undermining the adoption of restrictions on s… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(19 citation statements)
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References 41 publications
(48 reference statements)
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“…, 2006; Muggli et al . 2008); and youth smoking prevention schemes—largely ineffective measures aimed at dissuading policymakers of the need for general marketing restrictions (Landman et al 2002; Assunta and Chapman 2004; Henriksen et al 2006; Sebrié and Glantz 2007; Apollonio and Malone 2010). By aiming to replace forms of corporate governance that are strongly associated with improved public health outcomes with alternatives for which there is no evidence of effectiveness, these initiatives raise two questions which have potentially far-reaching significance for the contemporary governance of CSR.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…, 2006; Muggli et al . 2008); and youth smoking prevention schemes—largely ineffective measures aimed at dissuading policymakers of the need for general marketing restrictions (Landman et al 2002; Assunta and Chapman 2004; Henriksen et al 2006; Sebrié and Glantz 2007; Apollonio and Malone 2010). By aiming to replace forms of corporate governance that are strongly associated with improved public health outcomes with alternatives for which there is no evidence of effectiveness, these initiatives raise two questions which have potentially far-reaching significance for the contemporary governance of CSR.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Founded in 1997 by the Soong Ching Ling Foundation (now the China Soon Ling Foundation),[140], [141] a high profile and well-connected Chinese charity which BAT considered to be a key anti-smoking group in China,[128] BAT's support for the Beijing Liver Foundation was designed to raise the profile of hepatitis which it considered “should be of greater significance to the [People's Republic of China] and the WHO” than smoking [142]. According to one document, the ultimate aim of the donation was to “reprioritise the agenda” of both the Soong Ching Ling Foundation and the Ministry of Public Health and “divert the public attention from smoking and health issues to liver diseases” [115], [140], [143]…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most papers describe how TTCs undermined national-level tobacco control policies in Europe (Hilamo, 2003; Szilagyi and Chapman, 2003a, 2004; Gilmore et al ., 2007; Krasovsky, 2010; Shrinae et al ., 2012; Lunze and Migliorini, 2013; Skafida et al ., 2014), Asia (Chantornvong et al ., 2000; Knight and Chapman, 2004a; MacKenzie et al ., 2004; Tong and Glantz, 2004; Zhong and Yano, 2007; MacKenzie and Collin, 2008; Muggli et al ., 2008; Charoenca et al ., 2012), the Middle East (Nakkash and Lee, 2009), Latin America (Sebrie et al ., 2005, 2009; Holden and Lee, 2011) and Africa (Curry and Ray, 1984; Stebbins, 1987; Otanez et al ., 2009; Delobelle et al ., 2016). A few studies focus on policy influence at the regional and global levels through industry bodies (Ong and Glantz, 2000; McDaniel et al ., 2008), trade and investment agreements (Holden and Lee, 2011; Fooks and Gilmore, 2013; Crosbie et al ., 2014; Eckhardt et al ., 2015), public health bodies (Weishaar et al ., 2012; Peeters et al ., 2016; Smith et al ., 2016b) and religious groups (Petticrew et al ., 2015).…”
Section: Tobacco Industry Globalization: a Review Of The Public Healtmentioning
confidence: 99%