Over 125 Organizations Call on Social Media Companies to End All Tobacco Advertising, Including by Paid Influencers

May 22, 2019

WASHINGTON, DC – The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids is joining more than 125 public health and other organizations from 48 countries in calling on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Snapchat to immediately end the promotion of cigarettes, e-cigarettes and all other tobacco products on their platforms, including prohibiting the use of social media influencers.

A letter sent to the CEOs of these companies describes how tobacco manufacturers, including Philip Morris International, British American Tobacco, Imperial Brands and Japan Tobacco International, have conducted social media marketing campaigns that have been viewed billions of times worldwide. These campaigns reach millions of young people and undermine efforts to reduce tobacco use and save lives.

The letter urges the social media companies to strictly enforce their existing policies prohibiting paid advertising for tobacco products on their platforms, to extend these policies to prohibit the use of paid influencers to promote tobacco products, and to ensure the policies include all tobacco products and e-cigarettes.

“While Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Snapchat have advertising policies rightly prohibiting the promotion of tobacco products, the fact that these policies are not consistently applied to influencer content creates a loophole that is currently allowing rampant marketing of cigarettes, e-cigarettes and heated cigarettes like IQOS to young users on social media,” the letter states.

Without swift action by the social media companies, “Philip Morris International and other tobacco companies will continue to use your platforms to addict the next generation of tobacco users around the world,” the letter states.

Recent media reports and studies have documented the widespread use of social media to market tobacco products:

“Tobacco companies use social media to promote their products because they know Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Snapchat are the gateway to young people all over the world,” said Matthew L. Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. “In fact, the tobacco industry’s entire business model depends on addicting the next generation of tobacco users to its products. Social media companies must take action now to protect young people from the tobacco industry’s predatory marketing practices.”

In addition to the letter to social media companies, six U.S. public health and medical organizations recently sent a letter urging the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to immediately revoke its authorization for Philip Morris to market IQOS in the U.S. if the company uses youth-oriented marketing tactics, including on social media, as it has in other countries.

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