Litcius/Paper detail

Oral nicotine marketing claims in direct-mail advertising

Lauren Czaplicki, Minal Patel, Basmah Rahman, Stephanie N Yoon, Barbara Schillo, Shyanika W. Rose

2021Tobacco Control61 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background Little is known regarding how oral nicotine products (eg, nicotine pouches, lozenges) are marketed to consumers, including whether potential implicit reduced harm claims are used. In the current study, we explored the marketing claims present in a sample of direct-mail oral nicotine advertisements sent to US consumers (March 2018–August 2020). Methods Direct-mail ads (n=50) were acquired from Mintel and dual-coded for the following claims: alternative to other tobacco products, ability to use anywhere, spit-free, smoke-free and product does not contain tobacco leaf. We merged the coded data with Mintel’s volume estimate (number of mail pieces sent to consumers) and calculated the proportion of oral nicotine advertisements containing claims by category. Results Of the 38 million pieces of oral nicotine direct-mail sent to US consumers, most featured claims that the product could be used anywhere (84%, 31.8 million pieces); was an alternative to other tobacco products (69%, 26.1 million pieces); and did not contain tobacco leaf (eg, ‘tobacco leaf-free’, ‘simple’ approach of extracting nicotine from tobacco; 55%, 20.7 million pieces). A slightly smaller proportion contained claims that oral nicotine was ‘spit-free’ (52%, 19.8 million pieces) or ‘smoke-free’ (31%, 11.7 million pieces). Conclusion Our results provide an early indication of marketing claims used to promote oral nicotine. The strategies documented, particularly the use of language to highlight oral nicotine is tobacco-free, may covey these products as lower-risk to consumers despite the lack of evidence or proper federal authorisation that oral nicotine products are a modified-risk tobacco product . Future research is needed to examine consumer perceptions of such claims.

Topics & Concepts

Tobacco productNicotineHarmAdvertisingDirect mailAuthorizationMedicineTobacco controlTobacco industryProduct (mathematics)BusinessEnvironmental healthMarketingPublic healthLawPolitical scienceComputer scienceInternal medicineNursingComputer securityMathematicsPathologyGeometrySmoking Behavior and CessationPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentBehavioral Health and Interventions