TY - JOUR T1 - Tobacco product developments coinciding with the implementation of plain packaging in Australia JF - Tobacco Control JO - Tob Control SP - e116 LP - e122 DO - 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2013-051509 VL - 24 IS - e1 AU - Michelle Scollo AU - Jessica Occleston AU - Megan Bayly AU - Kylie Lindorff AU - Melanie Wakefield Y1 - 2015/03/01 UR - http://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/content/24/e1/e116.abstract N2 - Australia's plain packaging legislation was passed in the lower house of the Australian Parliament on 21 November 2011, and was signed into law a few weeks later on 1 December 2011.1 The legislation requires that all tobacco sold at retail in Australia after 1 December 2012 be packaged in drab, dark brown packs, with standardised lettering for the brand name (in Pantone Cool Gray, 2C Lucida Sans regular font, size 14, with no capital letters apart from the first in each word) and any variant name in font size 10. Further, packs sold are also required to feature graphic health warnings covering 75% of the front of pack and 90% of the back.2As part of our routine surveillance activities, we monitor offerings of factory-made cigarettes of all three major manufacturing companies in Australia—British American Tobacco Australia (BATA), Philip Morris (PM), and Imperial Tobacco Australia (ITA). We examine available trade magazines and undertake monthly checks of products available on-line and in-store. Periodically, we also receive promotional flyers that have been distributed by the manufacturing companies to retailers. From these sources we report five major trends in the factory-made cigarette market in Australia that we discerned in the 12 months leading up to, and following, the implementation of plain packaging: (1) reassurance of product quality to smokers; (2) shift of promotional attention to brand and variant names; (3) renewed emphasis on value for money; (4) introduction of novel products and (5) rationalisation of product offerings. Examples of each of these trends are described below using complementary photographic material. Throughout the lead-in period, manufacturers communicated to consumers via the branded packaging of their cigarettes. All three major manufacturers used messages on the pack face of at least one of their top selling brands. Trend 1.1. Written guarantees of continuing quality Figure 1 demonstrates a reassurance message from BATA to … ER -