Tag: Brian KIng

  • Brian King Joins Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids

    Brian King Joins Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids

    Yesterday (May 1), the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids today named Brian King as Executive Vice President for U.S. Programs to lead the organization’s work at the federal, state and local levels. Last month King was forced out of his role as the director of the U.S. Food & Drug Administration’s (FDA) Center for Tobacco Products (CTP).

    “Brian King is extraordinarily qualified to lead our U.S. programs at this critical time.,” said Yolonda C. Richardson, president and CEO of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. “Brian has dedicated his career to advancing science-based policies and programs that reduce tobacco use and its devastating consequences. His leadership, passion and breadth of knowledge and experience will guide us in the next phase of our work to protect children and end the death and disease caused by tobacco.”

    Under King’s leadership, the CTP was besieged by criticism from all sides, including politicians, anti-smoking advocates, and tobacco and vaping companies, as the FDA rejected applications for millions of flavored e-cigarettes, citing insufficient data that the products would help adult smokers while not becoming popular with underage kids. Those rejections resulted in multiple lawsuits against the FDA from vape makers.

    Prior to joining FDA, King served as the Deputy Director for Research Translation in CDC’s Office on Smoking and Health and as Executive Editor of CDC’s Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report. He holds a doctorate and M.P.H. in Epidemiology from the State University of New York at Buffalo.

  • FDA Whistleblower Dishes on Agency’s Shortfalls

    FDA Whistleblower Dishes on Agency’s Shortfalls

    David Oliveira, who recently left the FDA after six years as a senior staffer, is speaking out about problems at the agency under the Biden administration, including tobacco control, diversity, equity and inclusion, and failures to combat China flooding the U.S. market with illicit vapes after the FDA’s top tobacco official was removed from his position. 

    “Many of us had been anticipating it for quite some time. We knew that change was drastically needed at FDA when it came to Tobacco Control,” Oliveira said in an interview with Fox News Digital. “Because Tobacco Control had really gotten out of control, there were many, many failures in core missions for the center that needed dramatic change and new leadership.

    “Many of us, whether it be from public health, consumers, small business owners, industry, and including even Senator Dick Durbin, who last year at a hearing said to Brian King, ‘It looks to me that you have fallen down on the job.’ So really, it runs the spectrum of people who are unhappy with what’s gone on recently with FDA in terms of tobacco regulation.

    “I frequently would attend shows and visit vape shops, and I was somewhat a canary in a coalmine, and would report back as to what I was seeing, and I would warn them that what I was seeing on the ground was out of control. We had a lot of people in the building who would go online and try to do some surveillance, but when you get out into the real world and you see the number of vape shops that are flooded with these illicit products, and I started to warn them about the amount of nicotine that was in these devices. We went from a Juul device, which had around 200 puffs, which was the equivalent of one pack of cigarettes, then I started seeing 5,000 puffs. I brought that warning back to the center, and then the following year would see 10,000 puffs. Now on the market, you can see 40,000 and 50,000 puffs. This is what the Chinese have done. They have not sought to get products authorized. They will introduce the latest and greatest technology. I saw a Santa one that was red and white. They’ll introduce flavors like Gummy Bear, Blow Pop, and Fruit Rollups, and these things that are absolutely youth-appealing because they do not care.” 

    View the 15-minute interview here.

  • Brian King, Dozens of Staffers Out at CTP

    Brian King, Dozens of Staffers Out at CTP

    The Associated Press is reporting that Brian King, the Food and Drug Administration’s chief tobacco regulator, was removed from his post this morning (April 1) amid sweeping cuts at the agency and across the federal health workforce. According to sources familiar with the situation, King sent an email to staff saying, “It is with a heavy heart and profound disappointment that I share I have been placed on administrative leave.”

    King was removed from his position and offered reassignment to the Indian Health Service, according to a person familiar with the matter who did not have permission to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity. Dozens of staffers in the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products (CTP) also received notices of dismissal Tuesday morning, including the entire office responsible for enforcing tobacco regulations.

    In recent years, the CTP has been besieged by criticism from all sides, including politicians, anti-smoking advocates, and tobacco and vaping companies. Under King, the FDA rejected applications for millions of flavored e-cigarettes, citing insufficient data that the products would help adult smokers while not becoming popular with underage kids. Those rejections have resulted in multiple lawsuits against FDA from vape makers.

    “King, who joined the agency in 2022, has been vigorously criticized by vaping lobbyists for ordering thousands of companies to remove their fruit and candy-flavored e-cigarettes from the market,” the AP wrote. “During his time at FDA, teen vaping has fallen to a 10-year low.”

    The latest changes mean that nearly all of FDA’s top leaders overseeing drugs, food, vaccines, medical devices, and now tobacco products have resigned or retired in recent months. This comes after Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s moves to fire 3,500 FDA staffers and push ahead with plans to scrutinize ultra-processed foods, childhood vaccines, antidepressants, and other long-established products.

  • FDA Tobacco Chief Discusses Relative Risk

    FDA Tobacco Chief Discusses Relative Risk

    Brian King (Photo: FDA)

    In an article published in Addiction magazine, Brian King, director of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Tobacco Products (CTP), explores the chances and considerations for informing adults who smoke cigarettes about the relative dangers of tobacco products, including e-cigarettes. He collaborated with Benjamin Toll, director of the Medical University of South Carolina Tobacco Treatment Program and co-director of the Lung Cancer Screening Program.

    The commentary highlights the findings of a recent survey about misperceptions of tobacco product harms, including cigarettes and e-cigarettes. The survey found that only about 20 percent of adults who smoke cigarettes believed e-cigarettes contain fewer harmful chemicals than cigarettes. While there are no safe tobacco products, the available scientific evidence indicates that tobacco products exist on a continuum of risk, with cigarettes being the most harmful. 

    The commentary notes that opportunities exist to educate adults who smoke about the relative risks of tobacco products, including e-cigarettes. However, these efforts should be accompanied by efforts to prevent youth tobacco product use; encourage first-line use of FDA-approved cessation therapies; and for adults who both smoke and use e-cigarettes, reinforce the importance of completely transitioning to e-cigarettes.

    The commentary further emphasizes that any education efforts on the relative risks of tobacco products must be evidence-based. In particular, it is important to assess the benefits among the intended population (i.e., adults who smoke) and risks among unintended populations (e.g., youth). Currently, FDA is in the early stages of a research effort to assess messaging about the continuum of risk of tobacco products among adults who smoke.

    Last week, the FDA announced a virtual listening session opportunity to verbally provide open public comment on the development of the new strategic plan, including proposed strategic goals. After introductions, the center will begin the listening session with an overview of the process used to develop the CTP’s strategic plan, including proposed goal areas.

    Registration is open for the virtual listening session on the development of the CTP’s five-year strategic plan, which will take place on Aug. 22 beginning at 10 a.m. EDT.

     

  • FDA Publishes Citizen Petition Webpage

    FDA Publishes Citizen Petition Webpage

    A new webpage was published by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration of all the tobacco products-related citizen petitions received by the agency’s Center for Tobacco Products (CTP).

    A citizen petition is a way for the FDA to give individuals, regulated industry representatives, or consumer groups to petition the agency to issue, amend, revoke a regulation, or take other administrative action. The requirements for a citizen petition are set out in the Code of Federal Regulations.

    As part of CTP’s stated commitment to increase transparency, the webpage was developed to provide the public with more easily accessible and user-friendly information about tobacco product-related citizen petitions submitted to FDA and the center’s responses.

    This webpage was one of the immediate actions toward transparency outlined by CTP Director Brian King in CTP’s Response to the Reagan-Udall Foundation’s report.