Better late than never, BBC publishes Forest response to plain pack report

Well, that was weird.

At 14.05 yesterday BBC News published a report entitled Plain cigarette packs 'encourage smokers to quit'.

It 'revealed' that:

Selling cigarettes in unbranded packs seems to make tobacco less appealing and encourages smokers to quit, suggests a study ...

The findings come days after ministers were criticised for putting on hold a plan to impose plain packs in England.

There were quotes from Cancer Research UK and the British Heart Foundation but nothing from 'our' side.

An hour or two later, in response to a tweet by BBC News linking to its own report, Forest tweeted:

@BBC News Another biased, one-sided report. Where's the evidence that youth smoking rates or even consumption have fallen?

It appears that someone at the BBC read it because this morning I was invited to submit a comment. I wrote:

"The study offers no credible evidence to suggest that plain packaging will reduce youth smoking rates or have any impact on adult consumption.

"The research, which was carried out in November 2012, before plain packaging was introduced, is based on highly subjective responses to questions about the perceived quality of cigarettes and the satisfaction consumers derive from smoking cigarettes sold in standard packs.

"There is no evidence that the sale or consumption of cigarettes has fallen in Australia since plain packs were introduced in December.

"So far the policy has made no difference to sales and no amount of spin or bluster can disguise that fact."

You can read the report ("Last updated at 14:05" yesterday) here.

Update: Chris Snowdon has this to say, That plain packaging study.

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