Table 1

Key events in Japanese smoking and health history

1957JTS starts funding external research into ‘smoking and health’
1964MHW issues directives to prevent underage smoking and to warn about health harms caused by smoking30
1970Smoking and Health Information Department established at JTS23
1971MHW testifies in Diet that tobacco is beyond ministry’s jurisdiction30
1972Modest caution goes on cigarette packs: ‘For health reasons, let’s be careful not to smoke too much’.
1973Council for the Study of Smoking and Health established by JTS
1977Per capita adult cigarette consumption (age 15 years and older) peaks at 3500 cigarettes per year92
1985JTS is privatised to become JT
Council for the Study of Smoking and Health publishes Studies on Smoking and Health 1979–1983
1986Smoking Research Foundation launched
1987Tobacco Institute of Japan established by JT and foreign companies
MHW’s first White Paper on Smoking and Health published
1989Tobacco Business Council submits report to MOF
1990The 1972 warning label is updated to: ‘As smoking might injure your health, let’s be careful not to smoke too much’
1993MHW’s second White Paper on Smoking and Health published
1996Japanese cigarette consumption peaks at 348 billion per annum92 93
1999JT’s annual profit from cigarette sales reaches 4.26 trillion yen93
2001Third White Paper on Smoking and Health published
2004Japan ratifies Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
2005Eight new warning labels introduced (each pack needs to carry two) including: ‘Tobacco smoke has a bad influence on the health of people around you, especially infants, children and the elderly etc. When smoking, let’s be careful not to bother people around you’.
2014Tokyo High Court refuses to acknowledge that secondhand smoke causes lung cancer and heart disease.
2016MHLW estimates number of deaths in Japan from exposure to secondhand smoke at 15 000 per year
Ministry’s fourth White Paper on Smoking and Health published
  • JT, Japan Tobacco, Inc; JTS, Japan Tobacco and Salt Public Corporation; MHLW, Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare; MHW, Ministry of Health and Welfare; MOF, Ministry of Finance.