B.C. woman criticizes seniors' group for partnering with tobacco company

A British Columbia woman is outraged over CARP's partnership with a major tobacco company, calling it a betrayal of the group's mission to support seniors' health.

Erica Johnson and Kimberly Ivany report for the CBC.


In short:

  • Ellen Gould, a CARP member, discovered the partnership with Rothmans, Benson & Hedges when invited to a focus group on smoking alternatives.
  • CARP’s association with the tobacco company, known for promoting vaping products, has sparked backlash for legitimizing potentially harmful products.
  • CARP's president defends the partnership, but Gould and others believe it conflicts with the group's mission to protect seniors' health.

Key quote:

"CARP should be advocating for smoking and vaping cessation programs, rather than giving Rothmans a new lease on life by promoting vaping to seniors."

— Ellen Gould, public policy researcher

Why this matters:

This partnership raises concerns about the influence of Big Tobacco on public health advocacy. With significant health risks linked to vaping, the collaboration questions CARP's commitment to its members' well-being. Read more: People puffing e-cigs are more likely to have heart attacks, strokes and depression.

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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