‘Poison in every puff’: Canada reveals warning labels on individual cigarettes
Health Canada’s new regulations that require warning labels to be printed on individual cigarettes are set to come into effect this summer.
The move, first announced last year, makes Canada the first country in the world to take that step aimed at helping smokers quit the habit.
The wording on every cigarette, written in English and French, ranges from warnings about harming children and damaging organs to causing impotence and leukemia. One caution says smoking is “poison in every puff.”
Health Canada said Wednesday, on World No Tobacco Day, that the goal of the strategy is to reach less than five per cent of tobacco use by 2035 as part of new regulations that will also strengthen health-related graphic images displayed on tobacco packages.