An expenditure analysis revealing how Philip Morris advertisements coincide with tobacco policymaking in Switzerland
Kris Schürch, Annika Frahsa, Harvy Joy Liwanag, Luciano Ruggia

TL;DR
This study examines how Philip Morris tobacco advertisements in Switzerland align with tobacco policy discussions, suggesting an attempt to influence policymaking.
Contribution
The study provides detailed expenditure analysis of tobacco advertising in Switzerland and identifies a temporal link between ads and parliamentary sessions.
Findings
87.22% of tobacco-related press advertisements in Switzerland between August 2020 and August 2021 were linked to Philip Morris International.
PMI accounted for 88.21% (CHF 6,486,969) of total tobacco advertisement expenditure during the study period.
PMI advertisements coincided with key parliamentary sessions discussing tobacco legislation.
Abstract
Prior research has linked media tobacco promotion to increased tobacco use and favorable perceptions of tobacco products. Switzerland's tobacco lobby employs advertisements to sway policy decisions in its favor, yet no recent research has assessed this in detail. Our study aims to provide detailed estimates of tobacco industry (TI) advertisement costs, focusing on Philip Morris International (PMI) in Switzerland, and examine potential chronological links between TI advertisement campaigns and parliamentary discussions on tobacco bills. By spreading knowledge on this issue, we aim to support the development of future tobacco advertisement regulations. We conducted an expenditure analysis of tobacco-related press advertisements in Swiss print media published between August 2020 and August 2021, accessed through the media intelligence firm Argus Data Insights. Advertisement costs were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Public Health Policies and Epidemiology
