Stirling University fighting attempt by Philip Morris to gain access to research under freedom of information laws Stirling University is fighting attempts by one of the world’s largest tobacco companies to gain detailed access to its research into the smoking habits and attitudes of teenagers. Philip Morris International, which makes Marlboro cigarettes, wants the university’s centre for tobacco control research to hand over its data on thousands of children who are smokers. The detail reveals their attitudes to smoking and reactions to packaging and advertising. The company has successfully complained to the Scottish information commissioner, Kevin Dunion, after Stirling refused to answer a freedom of information request seeking access to the research. The university said the firm’s application, originally made anonymously through a London law firm, was “vexatious” and rejected it. But Dunion has overruled the university and ordered it to respond to Philip Morris’s request. Professor Gerard Hastings, the centre’s director, said the tobacco company was mining his research for confidential data on children’s attitudes – details a firm would not be allowed to collect itself on medical ethics grounds. “They wanted everything we had ever done on this,” Hastings told the Independent . “These are confidential comments about how youngsters feel about tobacco marketing. This is the sort of research that would get a tobacco company into trouble if it did it itself. “What is more, these kids have been reassured that only bona fide researchers will have access to their data. No way can Philip Morris fit into that definition.” Philip Morris said it was not seeking any confidential data that would identify the interviewees, and said the research findings it wanted to see were anonymised. Anne Edwards, the company’s head of external communications, said: “As provided by the FOI [Freedom of Information] Act, confidential and private information concerning individuals should not be disclosed. “We made the request in order to understand more about a research project conducted by the University of Stirling on plain packaging for cigarettes.” The centre for tobacco control research was set up by the charity Cancer Research Campaign, now Cancer Research UK, in 1999 within the university’s institute for social marketing, and is part of a UK-wide network of units studying tobacco and smoking. The dispute throws up the prospect of a drawn out legal battle between the university and Philip Morris. If Stirling again refuses the firm’s request, the appeal process could result in a judicial hearing at the court of session, Scotland’s civil court. The Scottish information commissioner’s office said he had to judge Philip Morris’s application neutrally under the Freedom of Information (Scotland) Act 2000, which is less restrictive than the equivalent legislation for England and Wales. Dunion has not ordered the university to release the data, but to properly assess the application. “What the commissioner has ruled is that he doesn’t believe that the request is vexatious,” a spokeswoman said. “All he has done is say: ‘You need to deal with this because it is a valid request.’ But the university could still refuse it on other grounds.” Smoking University of Stirling Scotland Tobacco industry Higher education Health Children Severin Carrell guardian.co.uk